Raging Spirits

Raging Spirits is a roller coaster attraction in Tokyo DisneySea, began operation on July 21, 2005. Created by Walt Disney Imagineering, the attraction takes guests on a thrilling, high-speed ride through the ruins of an ancient ceremonial site, visually based on the Incan buildings in the mountainous region of Peru. The attraction is located in Tokyo DisneySea's Lost River Delta section.

Much like the roller coaster design on which it is based—the Indiana Jones et le Temple du Péril attraction at Disneyland Paris —guests riding Raging Spirits board hopper cars that propel them along tracks around the archeological excavation site.

Tokyo DisneySea attractions & entertainment
Mediterranean Harbor
  • Fortress Explorations
  • DisneySea Transit Steamer Line
  • Venetian Gondolas
  • The Legend of Mythica
  • Fantasmic!
Mysterious Island
  • Journey to the Center of the Earth
  • 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
Mermaid Lagoon
  • Ariel's Greeting Grotto
  • Flounder's Flying Fish Coaster
  • Scuttle's Scooters
  • Mermaid Lagoon Theater
  • Jumpin' Jellyfish
  • Blowfish Balloon Race
  • The Whirlpool
  • Ariel's Playground
Arabian Coast
  • Jasmine's Flying Carpets
  • The Magic Lamp Theater
  • Caravan Carousel
  • Sinbad's Storybook Voyage
Lost River Delta
  • Indiana Jones Adventure: Temple of the Crystal Skull
  • DisneySea Transit Steamer Line
  • Raging Spirits
  • "Saludos Amigos!" Greeting Dock
  • Mickey & Friends' Greeting Trails
Port Discovery
  • Aquatopia
  • StormRider
  • DisneySea Electric Railway
American Waterfront
  • Toy Story Mania!
  • Turtle Talk
  • Tower of Terror
  • Big City Vehicles
  • DisneySea Electric Railway
  • DisneySea Transit Steamer Line
Park-wide
  • Disney Magic in the Sky
  • Meet & Smile
  • Big Band Beat
  • My Friend Duffy
  • Mystic Rhythms

Famous quotes containing the words raging and/or spirits:

    There is a law in each well-ordered nation
    To curb those raging appetites that are
    Most disobedient and refractory.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    But seldom the laurel wreath is seen
    Unmixed with pensive pansies dark;
    There’s a light and a shadow on every man
    Who at last attains his lifted mark—
    Nursing through night the ethereal spark.
    Elate he never can be;
    He feels that spirits which glad had hailed his worth,
    Sleep in oblivion.—The shark
    Glides white through the phosphorus sea.
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)