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Trip to Russia - Part 7: Wonder Island

Gavin

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I was going to try and play catch up with some trip reports from last summer, but thinking it might be better to just ditch them since a. it's ages ago b. the next one would've been Gronalund and someone just did one (which, predictably, has gone largely ignored) and c. there are other people going to Russia this summer and this might be helpful or at least get a slight bit of interest, which it wouldn't otherwise

The whole trip started by heading straight to Manchester after work to see Lana Del Rey (quickly christened Lana Del FAB) with Ed. She was really good. I remember there was some big thing about her being **** based on a SNL performance a year or so ago, but she was excellent. Quick picture courtesy of Ed's Facebook:

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My flight was from Manchester first thing on Sunday morning, so it wasn't worth going home just to come back. I stayed at one of the airport hotels on Saturday. Nothing to report there. It was as gray and soulless as it sounds.

The flight was fine. Four hours with Easyjet is never going to be the height of luxury travel, but at least it wasn't Ryanair. A big part of the reason I ended up taking this trip was because Easyjet opened a Manchester to Moscow route. Not only is it now cheap, there's no need with the extra hassle of heading down to a London airport, which would've been the only option previously.

Getting into Moscow was easy and hassle free, and then I got the metro to the area I was staying in. The Moscow Metro is famous for being amazingly over-the-top thanks to Stalin. It's also incredibly busy (third busiest in the world after Tokyo and Seoul), but very, very efficient. I never waited more than a minute for a train the whole time I was there. It's really cheap as well: about 75p for one ride, regardless of distance.

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It also takes a lot more getting used to than other subway systems I've used. There are maps in English in the stations and on the trains, but that's it. None of the signs to direct you to the lines are in English, and once you're on the platforms, you're **** ed. Luckily, I'm not an idiot, so I'd printed a metro map in both English and Russian, which I stronglyrecommend doing before you go. I'm sure you could pick one up at tourist information at the airport though.

I found the place I was staying easily enough. Well, I found the right place, but there were no actual signs anywhere to say there was an actual hostel there. It was a bit worrying at first as I thought I must be in the wrong place, but I phoned them and they told me how to get in. Basically, it was just a converted apartment building; why they couldn't stick a sign up is beyond me.

I was thinking about heading to a couple of the parks, but by this point it was coming up to about 5 o'clock, I had no idea about park opening hours since there's no information on them, so I decided to leave it. Instead, I just walked down to Red Square, which was only a 15 minute walk away, and had a wander around there. The old English courthouse was on the way:

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Have some pictures of the area around Red Square, including Saint Basil's Cathedral, which was gaudy and amazing:

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This shopping mall was huge and gorgeous. I had a quick look around to see if there might have been a kiddy cred to be had since apparently there are a few in some random shopping malls in Moscow. This one was way too classy though, so I just something to eat instead.

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Lenin's mausoleum is also here. It was closed at the time I was here, but I went in a couple of days later. You can't take pictures of the corpse inside, so you'll have to make do of a couple of the outside.

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The red walls and towers are the walls of The Kremlin, which is massive and there'll be more of later; I know you can't wait!

Just on the other side of Red Square was a really nice garden area with fountains and ****.

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There's also some eternal-flame-tomb-of-unknown-soldier type thing.

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After wandering about a bit, I headed back to my room and chilled out with a few beers for a couple of hours before getting ready and heading out clubbing. I went to a club called Propaganda, which was really fun after I managed to get in. It was "preevet parrrrrty" at first, according to the first bouncer. It wasn't, obviously, but because it was gay night (not normally a gay club) they're careful of letting people in that they don't recognise, what with Russia being notorious for queer-bashing and stuff.

I spoke to a second guy who just typed something into his phone to translate and showed me the result: "It is gay night. Why not go gay?" After telling them that I was in fact actually gay, and no pretense would be necessary, I was let into the "preevet parrrrty". I'll obviously have to stop being so butch in order to avoid any future problems of this nature.

Anyway, the club was fun, I left at about five in the morning. And that was my first day/night in Russia.

Whoops, no coaster photos yet. Tough s**t.
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 1

Nice report! Russia is somewhere I want to visit, what sort of visa did you have to get?
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 1

Looks beautiful. Being a place I just probably won't ever visit, it's nice to see pictures of the touristy stuff.
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 1

"It is gay night. Why not go gay?"

Are you sure he wasn't hitting on you?

I do read most reports like this tbh, just feel silly replying to say good report etc..
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 1

I do read them and find them interesting, Gavin, I just rarely comment!

Nice TR so far. I really wanted to go to Russia this summer, but costs and potential burdenous visa problems put me off - it's definitely somewhere that's high on my 'to visit' list.
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 1

^ The visa's easy. Just fill in an online form, pay and send your passport. A week later, get passport back with visa.
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 1

That's how to do a **** capital city!

The metro was on Pointless last week - I got it right, but if you'd gone earlier, you could have claimed I got it right due to your trip report. Missed opportunity Gavin - plan better next time :p
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 1

Russia has never been #1 on my travel list, but I have to say that your report makes it look a lot more appealing than I originally thought! The cathedral is so tack-a-lack and the shopping mall looks so fancyy. Lenin's body must have been kinda creepy though </3

More more more!
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 1

Moscow has always intrigued me. Can't wait for more on this one :D
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 1

Right, so onto day two!

I say "day", when it's actually just more of an afternoon really. I woke up at around two in the afternoon. I had set an alarm for 10am, but I think the guy I woke up with must've turned it off since I never heard it and I'm usually really good at waking up, regardless of alcohol consumption the night before.

Anyway, I decided that since I'd already done a bit of the touristy stuff the previous day, I'd try a couple of parks. To be honest, with it being a Monday afternoon, and the weather being a bit ****, I wasn't too hopeful that anything would even be open, but I figured that by heading to the All Russian Exhibition Centre, there'd at least be stuff to see even if there were no creds to be had. Thus, it was onto the Metro (just a few stops from where I was staying and on the same line, so it was easy) to VDNKH. Another quick point regarding the Metro: "just a few stops" can take a bit of time since the distances between stations are generally quite large.

The area itself is amazing; it's like a huge, open-air museum to communism. The first thing you notice when you come out of the Metro is the Monument to the Conquerers of Space (thanks Wikipedia!), which is massive and awesome.

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The Ostankino Tower is in the same area. I didn't go to it - it was sort of a back-up plan in case I needed something to do if the parks were closed - but you can see it from anywhere around the whole area.

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From the metro station and space monument, it was just a couple of minutes walk to the entrance of the exhibition centre.

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Just off to the side, you can see the giant ferris wheel from one of the parks here: Attractionmania as it's labeled by rcdb.

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The amusement parks here, Attrapark and Attractionmania are located right inside the entrance to the exhibition centre: one on the left and one on the right, making them directly opposite each other. The whole exhibition area is basically used as a local park for people to hang out, roller-blade, hire bikes etc., so despite my initial concerns, everything in the amusement park areas was running. I started off with the park to the left of the entrance, Attrapark.

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The first coaster of the trip was just a crappy Wild Mouse.

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This one was weird though, in that it only had two-seater cars.

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Like all the parks I visited, things operate on a pay-per-ride basis, which is great for queues (EVERY ride on this whole trip was a walk on), but it meant that it was definitely a "grab-the-cred" kind of visit for each park rather than re-riding things and going on flat rides etc.

Looking at the park map at the entrance, it at first seemed that the kiddy coaster here had been removed since it wasn't where the map said it was. Luckily, it was just in a different area further into the park.

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I'll just throw in a few random pictures of other rides that this park had, none of which I bothered to ride. You'll notice a distinct lack of "action" pictures, but that's because there were very few people riding anything - everything was actually open.

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I didn't ride the drop tower. As you can see from this photo it was roughly the same height as the Ostankino Tower, as were the lampposts, which troubled me somewhat.

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I did, however, ride the park's third coaster, Frozen.

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OMG SCHWARZKOPF!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Actually, not that great. It was easily the best coaster in the park, but when the competition is a kiddy coaster and a wild mouse, that's not saying much. It's the same model as the one at Movieland in Italy for anyone who's ridden that.

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The only time I saw this running was when I was on it. I didn't really want to sit around and wait to get pictures since there was other stuff to see though, so here's the Ostankino Tower again, with a CRED in front of it. Just.

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Since I'd established that both parks were open until 8pm, I didn't immediately rush across to Attractionmania opposite, but instead had walk around the exhibition centre and finished off there.

The exhibition centre is huge - bigger than Monaco (thanks again Wikipedia!) - and is full of different pavilions and the sort of fountains that would make Amanda Thompson's knickers wet enough to drown a toddler in. Have a bunch of pictures:

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It was all just very cool and very Soviet, and a great place to wander around regardless of the coasters. However, since there be coasters here, I obviously had to do the other park. RCDB has it listed as "Attractionmania", but I didn't see any sign of that name at all. In fact, most parks don't seem to really have a name at all; they're just a bunch of rides plonked in an area of an existing park.

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Right inside the entrance was this thing, which I've never seen before.

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Just to explain, it's one of those rides that just goes continuously upside-down. However, unlike the usual Ranger/Kamikaze rides, it's not powered all the way round. It worked like a swinging ship - tyres at the bottom propelling it - but was strong enough to send it right the way over. I gave it a go since it was a new ride type for me, and it was really quite fab.

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This park didn't have as many rides as the one opposite. Dunno what this was:

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It did have a huge ferris wheel though, which I didn't ride. It used to be the biggest in Europe before the one at Miribilandia, followed by The London Eye, took over.

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What was a bit different was that it had a few of these open cars. I kind of wish I'd have given it a go now to be honest since it was something different.

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The two coasters are just off to the side of the wheel, both made by Pax. The first one doesn't have any pictures on RCDB yet, so enjoy some exclusive photos.

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It was amazing for its size. Any park thinking of getting a crappy old wild mouse coaster needs to stop what they're doing and get one of these. I imagine they'd cost about the same, they have about the same footprint, and they're soooooooo much better. £5 to ride it was slightly excessive though, so I only had the one go.

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The other Pax coaster is Cobra.

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I rode the version at Connyland last summer (trip report HERE, which was definitely better given the hills before the loop and the inverted spike, but this one was actually terrifying.

At Connyland, they were only operated the first four rows, so I never had a chance to ride near the back. On this one, I went straight for the back row, and getting dragged up backwards, vertically and very slowly, to about 150 feet with my whole bodyweight pressing into the restraint was absolutely horrible.

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What I never knew about this coaster is that after it reverses back through the loop and into the station, it doesn't stop. It coasts back and forth a couple of times, meaning that at that back you get another couple of decent drops, and at the front, you go into the top of the loop again and get hang time before it rolls back down.

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It was pretty rattly as well. I wouldn't say rough really since there are no turns to cause any proper jolts anywhere, but it really rattled its way through the entire course.

After Cobra gave me a headache, I decided it was time to leave. I'd probably only spent about 3 hours at the exhibition centre altogether, but I was tired after the traveling and really late night the day before, so I just wanted to have an evening to be lazy so that I could get up early the next day and have a proper full day of doing ****.

On the way back to the metro though, I spotted this awesome thing off to the side, so took a quick detour to have a closer look.

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I recognised it as a really famous socialist statue, but had no idea it was here, so I was pretty chuffed to have seen it. You get a view of Attractionmania from here as well.

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The statue was originally built for the Soviet pavilion at the Paris World's Fair, and then moved to Moscow later. Anyway, I think it's **** ing awesome.

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And that was the end of the second day!
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 2 Now Up (with coasters)

Smithy said:
Everything in Russia is **** huge.

And fab for it, some of the momuments are just so ridiculously big they look amazing...

Moscow as an area looks interesting too...
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 2 Now Up (with coasters)

Thanks Gavin for this, i'm sure we'll be using this guide to help plan out stuff to see!

Can't wait to get overthere myself in a couple of months! The credits look vile! :p
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 2 Now Up (with coasters)

I'm a liar.

I was just uploading some pictures from Day 3 of the trip and realised that I didn't actually go back to the hotel after the exhibition centre. I actually called in at Sokolniki Park first, so consider this post an edit to the last one.

Sokolniki Park wasn't too far from the exhibition centre, so I decided to basically do a a quick cred whore run before heading back to the hotel. It's basically just a large park that people use for general recreation.

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Off to one side of the main entrance, there's a small amusement park area.

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To be fair, there was more here than I was expecting.

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The more modern rides came from Zamperla. They had a Disco, a modern take on those old-fashioned rolling cage things, which I've never seen before, and were constructing a kiddy drop tower and an Air Race.

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I just did a quick Google for "Kolobok" thinking it might be the ride type, but it's actually a Russian folktale character:

“Don’t eat me. I will sing you a song.”

So the Kolobok sang,

“I'm a happy Kolobok, crunchy and brown. In the oven I was baked, on the window sill cooled. From Dedushka I ran away, from Babushka too. I ran away from the Rabbit, Wolf and Bear, and now I’ll run away from you.”

This is the trick of the Kolobok (pronounced kah-lah-bohk, it means “roundie” in Russian), a tasty round ball of dough. He used it to distract his hungry adversaries long enough to make his escape. He’s a famous Slavic folktale character, and his story is known by children across Eastern Europe to this day.

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Cute!

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Then of course there was the reason to take the slight detour in the first place: a +1 Big Apple coaster.

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Right, now that's the end of the second day.
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 2 Now Up (with coasters)

Day 3 - Moscow Continued

This was my first proper full day in Moscow, given that I'd arrived quite late on the first day spent most of the second day in bed, so I got up early to fill my day with cultural ****.

I started by heading back to Red Square to go and do some of the stuff there. I'd already been to that area on my first evening, but by the time I got there everything was closed, so I couldn't do more than have a bit of a wander round. I intended to go into Saint Basil's Cathedral first, but it wasn't open when I got there, so I had a quick walk across the bridge just south of it.

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I love this building.

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You get a decent view of the south side of the Kremlin as well.

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And another fab Stalin building in the background.

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There was nothing much on the other side of the bridge, so I just headed back over to Red Square.

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Saint Basil's was still not open (opened at 11 if I remember correctly), so I went to have a quick look at Lenin's corpse first (no cameras allowed in the building at all) and then walked around to the entrance of The Kremlin. I started off with The Armories Museum, which was amazing, and paid the extra to go in and see the diamond fund, which is basically the equivalent of our Crown Jewels.

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The armories and diamond fund were quite pricey (a little over £20 altogether), but really worth it.

After that, I headed up to the main area that's open to tourists, which mostly consists of a bunch of churches. Again no pictures inside, but it's worth having a look as they're pretty impressive inside and really different to the usual Western-style cathedrals.

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The world's biggest bell is here is well, but it's **** ed and has never been rung.

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There's also a massive old canon.

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There are some nice gardens around the walls as well, where you can get some decent views of the surrounding area.

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After this I went back out circled back around south side of the Kremlin, along the river, and back to Saint Basil's.

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It's different to most churches in that there isn't really just one big central area, but a bunch of smaller ones with connecting passages. It was worth a look, but is much more impressive from the outside to be honest.

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It was early afternoon by this point - The Kremlin had taken up a few hours and I'd basically walked all the way around the outside of it as well - so I decided to do a bit of cred whoring. Back on the fab Metro.

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I headed to Victory Park, again thinking that regardless of coasters (rcdb had a big apple listed here) the place itself could be cool, and I wasn't wrong.

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I managed to find the amusement park area.

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With the big apple that I knew was here.

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Unfortunately, it was closed as I was there a bit too early. Despite most parks opening around 12-1, this one wasn't opening until 4 and I didn't want to hang around. I went back at the end of the day though. I probably wouldn't have bothered, but I also found this.

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BONUS CRED!!!!!!!!!!

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So yeah, with two kiddy coasters to be had, I obviously went back later and nabbed them. In the meantime though, I took a walk over to Filion Mall, which took about half an hour or so.

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Filion Mall is home to a shopping mall park: Happylon.

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I don't know what it is about these places, but I always find them really cool. They're usually pretty well themed as well. This one had a custom Vekoma roller skater in it. Anyway, here's a bunch of pictures.

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From Victory Park, I'd seen the Moscow International Business Centre, which is basically an ultra-modern bunch of tall buildings, so took a walk over there. It wasn't too far really - probably took about another half an hour to walk over there.

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This building <3.

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And fab bridge connecting it:

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It was still early evening, and knowing that parks were generally open until 8 or 9, I thought I'd try my luck with another park, so got back on the Metro and went to Ismaylovski Park, getting off at the station at the top end of the park. I don't think this was the station, but the Moscow Metro has amazing stations, so have some pictures anyway.

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The "Attrapark" area, or Luna Park as it's listed on rcdb, is at the top end of the park, very close to the metro station.

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This looks like a Pinfari, but I'm not sure that it is.

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It had a lapbar (single lapbar for both seats) and an OTSR, which I haven't seen on something like this before. It was actually really smooth though.

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After riding Dragon, I walked south through the park and came across another amusement area, which was already closed (It was about quarter to eight at this point).

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There were no creds here, but there was an enormous 7D!!!!!!!!!! theatre.

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Ismaylovski Park was really big, so I thought I'd head further down again to see if I could find anything.

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And sure enough:

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This was very lucky timing, as the place was about to close at 8pm and it was just a few minutes before. I wouldn't have bothered coming back just for this, but was very pleased to have discovered the second bonus cred of the day.

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Further into the park, roughly in the middle I guess, was a lake and large ferris wheel.

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This was still open, but I didn't ride it. This place was obviously popular for dates, as there were quite a few teenage couples hanging around and romantic music playing over the speaker systems. The girls were just standing around, hugging their boyfriends and listening to the music, pretending they were in some kind of romantic film, while the boys were just wondering when they'd get a chance to stick it in.

There was a 5D theatre here as well.

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I would've been impressed, but the one further up the park had an additional 2 Ds, so this one paled in comparison, so I got the Metro back to Victory Park to pick up the two coasters that had been closed earlier.

So that was day three: a busy touristy morning at The Kremlin and Saint Basil's, followed by some cred whoring which gave me a +5 to my count, including a smooth Pinfari-but-not looper and two, newly-discovered bonus creds.
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 3 (Bunch of Kiddy Coasters)

7D!!!! :lol:

Brilliant Gavin. Red Square and St. Basil's are fantastic, but everything (apart from the crap ride things) is. I love how utterly over the top it all is.

That shot with St. Basil's and that kind of road thing looks really weird, like a massive mall car park for it going down the hill, really odd.
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 3 (Bunch of Kiddy Coasters)

I didn't realize there were so many crap little parks in Russia! Looks super fab though and I'm so jealous. The city looks pretty big too, I must gooo. Was Lenin's body gross and waxey looking?
 
Re: Trip to Russia - Day 3 (Bunch of Kiddy Coasters)

LFTL said:
I didn't realize there were so many crap little parks in Russia! Looks super fab though and I'm so jealous. The city looks pretty big too, I must gooo. Was Lenin's body gross and waxey looking?

It's not that there's loads of crap parks; it's more that there are a lot of large, normal parks that tend to have tiny, little funfair areas shoved into them. Even the "major" places like Attrapark and Attractionmania are still just very small amusement areas shoved into the the much bigger Exhibition Centre. There are no specific amusement/theme parks in or near Moscow at all, which seems strange considering it's the biggest city in Europe.

The corpse was actually quite life-like. You're not allowed to linger to have a decent look though.
 
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