Cancel all your holiday plans - there's an inflatable unicorn island

The Unicorn Island extension of Inflatable Island in Subic, in the PhilippinesImage source, Inflata Nation
  • Published

Look away if you don't like pastels

Unicorn Island is an inflatable obstacle course on the water, which brings monkey vines and trampolines to the beach at Subic Bay, on the west coast of the Philippines.

And although the unicorn trend may be on its way out (apparently alpacas, external are way more 2018), all the Millennial pastels mean this park is still good for the 'gram.

This kitsch attraction is actually an extension of a larger theme park, Inflatable Island, which opened in April last year.

The pastels are made for Insta...
Image caption,

The pastels are made for Instagram

The park is fitted with slides, bridges, and various unicorn-themed hurdles - all with cutesy names like Baba’s Super Slide and Climby the Seaunicorn. And the unicorn-decorated section of Inflatable Island stretches across almost 6,400 square feet - that's more than two tennis courts worth of rainbow joy.

If all those pastels make you feel a bit funny, then you can chill out on beanbags on the beach - although they, too, are pink and purple.

There are beanbags on the beac...

So, if you thought people had had enough of unicorn inflatables after buying, external and then bursting them all of last summer, you were wrong.

OMG the weather

Sorry, we're having trouble displaying this content.View original content on Instagram
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.

So much pink

Sorry, we're having trouble displaying this content.View original content on Instagram
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.

For those who want something even quirkier than a unicorn park, here are a few more options from around the world…

Bonbon Land, Denmark

This Instagram post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on Instagram
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Skip instagram post 3 by bonbonlanddk

Allow Instagram content?

This article contains content provided by Instagram. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Meta’s Instagram cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
End of instagram post 3 by bonbonlanddk

Kudos to the Danes for taking a theme park based on a brand of sweets and turning it into something truly odd. To be fair, the sweets themselves had rude names, external, like Store Babser (translated as 'big boobies') and Hundeprutter ('dog farts').

The rides in Bonbon Land are similarly wacky: there's the Crazy Turtle (pictured above) and The Horse Dropping. Stick to the bodily-function theme, its most famous ride is the Dog Fart Roller Coaster, which involves a spin around mounds of giant poo, external while flatulent sounds parp on loudspeakers.

This X post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on X
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Skip X post by themeparkreview

Allow X content?

This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
End of X post by themeparkreview

Soviet Bunker, Lithuania

People entering bunker

If you like your theme park thrills with a more hardline Soviet vibe, then this USSR-tribute option just outside Vilnius could be for you.

The bunker - referred to as an Underground Museum of Socialism - is located five meters below ground, and offers visitors what it calls a three-hour "1984 Survival Drama".

Examination room in bunker

When you get to the bunker, you'll be met by guards with dogs, made to hand over your belongings and wear a Soviet-era coat to recreate something of what life was like in the former USSR.

It involves navigating a maze, going through a KGB interrogation, and learning to apply a gas mask. You'll also see makeshift 'Lenin propaganda rooms', Soviet doctor's rooms, and schools.

Examination in bunker

There's also a chance to dance to era-specific music, eat a classic Soviet dinner yourself, watch TV shows and peruse shops from 1984.

Love Land, South Korea

Love land kissing statues

If Erotikaland wasn't enough to scratch your sexualised theme park itch, then you could do worse than make your way to this spot on the South Korean island of Jeju.

Opened in 2004, Love Land actually exists for quite a sweet reason: to help to educate inexperienced newlyweds about the pleasures of the flesh.

Girl kissing statue

It specialises in erotic outdoor sculptures and a celebration of all things carnal, with 140 sculptures depicting humans in various sexual positions, as well as oversized phallus statues and stone labia.

It also runs sex education films and features interactive exhibits, such as the intriguingly titled 'self-pleasuring bicycle'.

Wunderland Kalkar, Germany

Nuclear plant theme park

Finally, not many theme parks can claim to be within an actual nuclear power plant. This site at Kalkar in Germany never went into operation, and so instead became a leisure site. They even repurposed that enormous nuclear cooling tower to be a 58-meter high 'Vertical Swing'.

cooling tower swing

Inflata Nation, Manchester

If you'd rather something closer to home, the UK's first permanent inflatable theme park opened in Manchester last year - and it's not only adult-friendly, it's available for adult-only sessions.

InflataNation
Image caption,

InflataNation

The theme park's features include an inflatable climbing wall, two-lane assault course, Gladiators-style duel platform, a huge slide down into a ball pool, and two other drop slides.

So if this sudden burst of sunshine has made you dream of alfresco fun, you have nuclear power plants, unicorns and sex bicycles to choose from, you lucky thing.

This article was originally published on 23 October 2017.

Read more:

This is what happens if you open a plane door mid-flight

This underwater restaurant looks creepy as hell but you'll still want to go

'Today, I flew on the set of a nightmare' - things you really don't want to see on a plane

A multi-storey go-kart race track will soon return joy to the world