Celestial Park is the only one of the lands at Epic Universe not based on intellectual property and has caught the attention of theme park fans as a result. There’s also the perpetual Universal vs. Walt Disney World fan debate, and reality that World Celebration is an easy comparison. For this and several other reasons discussed here, Celestial Park has become the most polarizing ‘portal’ of Epic Universe, with opinions ranging from it being an EPCOT killer to the park’s weakest link.

Let’s start this review with a quick introduction to Celestial Park. Whether arriving at Epic Universe through the front entrance or Helios Grand Hotel, guests flow through Celestial Park to the left or right of the water features that likewise flow from Luna, goddess of the moon, to Apollo, god of the sun. With acres of rolling gardens, chasing waterways and strolling pathways, Universal Orlando has boasted that “Celestial Park puts the ‘park’ back in ‘theme park.’”

Celestial Park features over two-dozen lush living gardens nestled along shimmering waters surrounded by stunning architecture inspired by astronomical and mythological elements. According to Universal, guests can relax in Celestial Park while taking in the sights and sounds around them, board a shooting comet for an exhilarating roller coaster adventure, dine on delectable cuisine, shop exclusive merchandise to commemorate their visit and more.

Celestial Park’s seven acres of water where a multitude of fountains sway, dance – and even reach heights up to 135 feet in the air – to music and interactive lighting from day to night. Above all else, Celestial Park acts as a world between worlds, and is essentially the hub through which guests enter the portal for each intellectual property-based land in the park. Think of it like Main Street at Magic Kingdom or, more aptly, World Celebration at EPCOT.

(Note: this was originally intended to be one subsection of our larger Epic Universe theme park review, but it kept getting longer, so is being separated out to its own standalone post. For better or worse, Celestial Park is the most thought-provoking land at Epic Universe, and the one deserving of the discourse.)

The unequivocal highlight of Celestial Park is the fountain shows that play throughout the day and night.

Thus far, these have occurred sporadically and not on a set schedule. Most of these are relatively brief, with the fountains dancing to background music in between the actual shows. There’s a full nighttime fountain show (or multiple?) that last ~15 minutes, but I’ve only managed to catch this from my room at Helios Grand Hotel.

Universal has access to a great suite of music from its film franchises and beyond, and Epic Universe is no different in this regard. Some of this will be lost on casual guests, as I’d imagine the themes from Super Mario Galaxy aren’t going to be instantly recognizable to all but the most hardcore Nintendo fans. But good music is good music, and these scores plus water plus lighting are a great mix.

Once the sun sets, the show lighting in Celestial Park is fantastic.

This whole area is an A/V geek’s dream, as this feels like the first theme park area in Central Florida that’s designed with just an absurd amount of customizability. It’s impressive the way the lighting in the fountains, bulbs and everywhere throughout Celestial Park can be synchronized, changed simultaneously and instantaneously.

Having an aerial view of this being programmed and tested from Helios Grand was really fascinating–controlling this must be a ton of fun, kinda like our Twinkly Christmas tree, but at a massive scale. I’m not sure that high-tech wizardry always delivers the warmth that makes these spaces feel inhabited, but it looks really cool, regardless.

Speaking of cool, Celestial Park is the opposite of cool during the day. This is something we covered at length in Why You Should Skip Epic Universe in 2025, so I don’t want to belabor the point, but Celestial Park is hot. 

For all of the bluster from Universal about Celestial Park putting the “park” back in theme park, it sure doesn’t feel that way when you’re actually there, on the ground. There are no mature trees or shade structures of any sort, but instead, large swaths of the most reflective pavement on earth. You can feel the heat from both above and below, making it difficult to spend time in Celestial Park during the day.

Throughout my visits to Epic Universe (all days that weren’t even all that hot or humid), I’ve seldom seen more than a handful of guests in Celestial Park during the day aside from those going from point A to B. It’s always been a veritable ghost town, and for good reason–it’s incredibly uncomfortable. Celestial Park might be a lovely park-like setting a decade from now, but in the immediate future, it’ll likely become umbrella central this summer.

Despite the practical reality that it’s hot and few guests are actually spending appreciable time there, many of my fellow diehard theme park fans are getting lost in their love for Celestial Park. This praise has become exaggerated for a couple of reasons.

First, Celestial Park is a land without ties to intellectual property, which is becoming exceedingly rare for Disney or (especially) Universal. Original concepts are catnip for theme park fans, even if they (sadly) don’t resonate with the general public in the same way.

Second, Celestial Park is a contrast to the recent EPCOT overhaul, which was bad. Very bad. There’s no way around that, so we might as well acknowledge it. Our own review of CommuniCore Hall and World Celebration was scathing, calling it better than a dirt pit but having little other praise for the project. Universal fans are unsurprisingly latching on to the disparity between Celestial Park and World Celebration as “proof” that Universal is beating Disney.

At the risk of stating the obvious, World Celebration being very bad does not automatically make Celestial Park good. The latter being better than the former also doesn’t make Celestial Park great! There’s still room in such a coherent analysis for them to both be bad or underwhelming!

To be clear, I do not think Celestial Park is bad. But I also think it falls well short of greatness. It has some excellent ideas, but the execution is scattershot at best and it suffers from plenty of problems and completely misses the mark for “putting the ‘park’ back in ‘theme park.’”

On paper, Universal did a good job. Unlike the EPCOT overhaul, it has an abundance of water features. These are also catnip for theme park fans, as it seems we’re often arbitrarily deprived of them. There are multiple fountains with synchronized jets that look lovely day or night (but especially night). There are flowing streams, reflecting pools, and beautifully-designed gardens. The above photo looks great, doesn’t it? Far better than anything in World Celebration!

The problem is that none of this is engaging or explorable. The above photo is not mine, because this is not possible from a guest-facing location. Notice something missing from the image? Walkways! Oddly enough, after trying to put the park back in theme park, Universal designed Celestial Park to be guest-flow corridors with wide walkways and only a scattering of tiny trees.

There is very little opportunity to get lost along little trails and discover quiet spaces, sit back and relax or simply slow down. For the most part, everything in the center of Celestial Park is for viewing from a distance–you walk along the periphery, with a couple of cut-through points.

This layout means that, even once the trees mature and there’s more shade, Celestial Park is largely going to be a conduit for getting guests from point A to B, at least during the daytime hours. There are very few areas that engage with the imagination, offer satisfying places to sit, or invite guests to get stay for a while.

For all of its problems, this is actually something World Celebration at EPCOT does better. It has smaller pathways and quiet spots to sit that beckon guests. By contrast, Celestial Park is largely one big loop of a very wide walkway–it’d work well as a performance corridor if Universal ever decides to add a parade, but it doesn’t feel particularly park-like except when viewed at a distance.

More than anywhere else at Walt Disney World, Celestial Park reminds me of Disney Springs in the way it’s designed.

Both have lovely water features, but the common areas are still primarily about funneling guests from place to place. A bit of form mixed with function. I far prefer the architecture of Celestial Park to the repurposed whatever of Disney Springs, but neither have the requisite level of warmth or any lived-in quality. They are not inviting places to linger or simply be.

Comparing Celestial Park to Walt Disney World’s shopping and dining destination is not meant to be a cheap shot at Epic Universe. There are plenty of ways Celestial Park runs circles around Disney Springs and other areas at Walt Disney World. If anything, this is another indictment of World Celebration, as it just dawned on me that there are things Disney Springs actually does better than that park’s new central spine. But I digress. 

Although the ‘park-like’ environment is what the marketing emphasizes, the high point of Celestial Park is its architecture and interior design. The land is this cool mix of Jules Verne meets Art Nouveau with a dash of exhibition-architecture and cosmos stylization. The insides of the restaurants and shops are all varied and interesting, showcasing Universal Creative at the top of their game.

Universal went above and beyond with these, allocating significant creative and monetary resources to getting this all right. Huge kudos here–I fear this same area done by Disney would’ve been a bunch of boring and vaguely modern designs (not a bold prediction given precisely what was delivered via World Celebration).

The exteriors aren’t always perfect and I fear that there won’t be quite enough to lure guests inside and explore these venues, but those who do will be rewarded with some of the most unique and interesting ideas, along with an unparalleled depth of design.

Simply put, the themed design work inside the spaces in Celestial Park is better than anything we’ve seen at Walt Disney World lately, especially in ‘blank slate’ spaces. I hope Imagineering takes the time to explore these stores and restaurants, and is disabused of the notion that everything like this needs to be sterile/crisp/clean/modern/airy/insert other buzzword for boring.

Again, Celestial Park is the one land in Epic Universe not based on intellectual property so what’s been created for its two attractions and vast array of restaurants and retail is original. But this doesn’t mean it’s devoid of storytelling. There’s a backstory for Celestial Park itself that also weaves into the four outlying portals, making this area the connective tissue that attempts to prevent this from being yet another ‘studios’ park.

According to the land’s lore, the Chronos is a device that gathers the cosmic energy needed to open the portals to the four worlds. The Chronos is in alignment, and alive with energy. It opened a grand gathering space for travelers from around the universe who have visited the portals, and the Chronos replaced the comets that had previously served as transportation across the cosmos.

At least, I think that’s the backstory. This was only ever relayed via the official “Discover Universal” Podcast and other pre-opening morsels of lore. The story was supposed to be conveyed to guests via the Hemisphere Stage and characters in Celestial Park who regaled guests with tales of the travels (think Citizens of Hollywood or Main Street). These characters were all cut very early-on during previews.

While I love the look of Celestial Park and can create my own headcanon to make sense of it all, I’d appreciate if there were more worldbuilding to flesh out its backstory and sense of time and place. This would also help make the land feel more lived-in, and attractive to regular guests, even if they’re not actively asking questions about this stuff.

The replacement for these Celestial-citizens is another way Celestial Park reminds me of Disney Springs is the entertainment. I hate to disparage live performers, as they’re an asset to any area, but the contemporary acts in Celestial Park playing top 40 hits and oldies remind me of those you’d see in Disney Springs or maybe CityWalk. It’s all generic, playing radio music you could hear anywhere.

Honestly, this is probably out of necessity. After spending time in Epic Universe, I now understand the why of the aforementioned entertainment cuts. With the way guests are moving through Celestial Park, there likely isn’t the opportunity for more nuanced acts that have time to organically unfold and slowly capture an audience. No one is willing to take the time to seek out this type of thing, or invest in it if passing by. Instead, the entertainment needs to be able to beckon guests from across Celestial Park.

It’ll be interesting to see how guest response to Celestial Park evolves over time, or if it does. My expectation is that this area in the center of the park will always hollow out during the daytime, with the many restaurants and retail spaces seeing comparatively less foot traffic and fewer patrons than those in portals–unless one rises to the top as destination dining (probably Atlantic?). But I could see Celestial Park feeling dead during the day for years to come, even as the portals themselves are slammed.

This won’t be an issue once the sun goes down, as that’s when Celestial Park is unquestionably at its prettiest. It’s arguably the best land in the entirety of Epic Universe at night, perhaps even surpassing Dark Universe. (The land with nighttime basically in its name!)

At dusk, the colorful fountains and lights of Celestial Park engage and attract guests as they’re leaving Epic Universe, and the increased dynamism will make Celestial Park a draw in the evening. The only problem with that, as with the EPCOT overhaul, is that nighttime is a small sliver of the Epic Universe operating day.

This is why we were so pleased to see Epic Universe extend its hours for the first half of summer. I hope this continues. Honestly, I’d even accept a “compromise” where the four primary portals close at 10 p.m., and Celestial Park stays open for shopping and dining until 11 p.m. Given the practical realities of clearing the park, and the potential for generating revenue, this seems like a win-win.

Finally, I’m not going to fixate on the quality of the two attractions in Celestial Park because we do that in our Ride Reviews & Rankings for Epic Universe. However, it is worth touching upon how they enhance Celestial Park as thematic elements, anchoring the land and giving it a sense of kinetic energy.

Constellation Carousel is incredible. It simply oozes warmth and is probably the first time in theme park history that a carousel has acted as a land’s “wienie.” I cannot get over what an asset this attraction is to Celestial Park and Epic Universe as a whole; it reminds me of Fantasyland at Disneyland Paris or Tokyo DisneySea, both the highest possible praise.

Everything about Constellation Carousel is first-rate. From its location in the middle of the park to the rockwork and fountains to the warm lighting, colorful critters and whirligigs overhead. It might be “only a carousel” as an attraction, but as an asset to the theme park, it’s so much more.

Then there’s the roller coaster on the perimeter of the park. One big “issue” tangential to Celestial Park that comes up a lot in fan debates is Stardust Racers being an exposed roller coaster visible from throughout the land and beyond. Disney wouldn’t have done this, it’s true! There’s a certain aversion to exposed steel (except when explained away by story) and stringence on sightlines among Disney fans vs. Universal fans.

I view all of this on a case by case basis. Not every sightline encroachment or thematic incursion is unforgivable. Some, such as seeing a German castle or Swiss mountain from Midwestern main street, are perfectly fine; they add an element of whimsy and unexpected cohesion. There’s no hard and fast rule to this–it’s a smell test. What works or is permissible is situational–does it add to the energy as opposed to distracting from the immersion?

To each their own, but I view the placement of Stardust Racers as a net positive and am not bothered by seeing it from elsewhere in the park or seeing backstage while on board the coaster. Stardust Racers radiates excitement and exhilaration, and the places from which it’s visible are mostly fine. It’s a net positive.

Ultimately, the core thesis of Celestial Park that’s been advanced by Universal Orlando is that it “puts the ‘park’ back in ‘theme park.’” This is seemingly the basis for fans calling it an EPCOT killer (well, and that it has many fountains whereas World Celebration does not, a fact that still stings). I’ve spent well over 2,000 words on it, but all you have to do is glance around Celestial Park during the day and see it nearly empty to disprove that thesis.

Ironically enough, it’s all of the non-park-like qualities where Celestial Park shines. The portal has flashes of brilliance and kernels of great ideas that could be fleshed out over time. It also has true exemplars of themed design and world-class theme park restaurants that locals and fans will want to revisit again and again (I cannot wait to return to Pizza Moon, one of my favorite spots in the entirety of Epic Universe). And then there’s nighttime, when darkness provides shade, the fountains come alive and the lighting is stunning.

All of that is a recipe for making me want to slow down and stay for a while in Celestial Park, even if I feel much differently during the day. In the end, Celestial Park is neither an EPCOT killer nor a weak link. It’s a warts and all opening act that could be better, and should improve over time. I’m looking forward to seeing how Celestial Park evolves, because it should. I have no such optimism for World Celebration. (Thankfully, that underwhelming central spine is not the totality of EPCOT’s atmospheric areas.)

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YOUR THOUGHTS

What do you think of Celestial Park? Impressed by the style or substance of Epic Universe’s opening act? Do you think it actually does “put the ‘park’ back in ‘theme park’”? Is this land an EPCOT killer, weakest link, or somewhere in between? Agree or disagree with our Celestial Park review? Any questions? We love hearing from readers, so please share any other thoughts or questions you have in the comments below!