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Disney World Shuts Down 25-Year-Old Attraction, Retires It From the Park

Signage for DinoLand U.S.A.
Credit: Disney

Disney has wiped away a significant chunk of its theme park history in Florida.

The Tree of Life at Disney's Animal Kingdom Theme Park in front of a clear blue sky.

Credit: Brittany DiCologero, Inside the Magic

Related: Magic Kingdom’s Opening Day Attraction Replaced—Fans Are Not Happy

Things are always changing at Walt Disney World, especially so in 2025, with this year set to be one of the biggest the resort has ever seen. From new rides and attractions to entirely new lands, guests can expect to see a lot close throughout 2025, with Disney’s Animal Kingdom specifically undergoing some intense upgrades.

This weekend marked the last day of It’s Tough to be a Bug, an interactive 3D show based on Pixar’s A Bug’s Life, leaving many fans feeling sad and nostalgic for the attraction. Disney has since updated its map for the park, wiping away the attraction completely.

Disney Scrubs Traces of It’s Tough to be a Bug from Park Maps

The exit sign for the 3D and 4D show It's Tough to be a Bug! at Disney's Animal Kingdom in Disney World

Credit: Ed Aguila, Inside the Magic

Related: Disney World’s EPCOT Area To Be Adults-Only Starting Later This Year

Disney has debuted a new map for its Animal Kingdom theme park, making several changes that seasoned guests will likely instantly notice. The front now features a new image of a child using binoculars. The animal trails have been reordered, and a “Character Greetings” section has been removed.

However, the biggest change by far is the removal of It’s Too Much to Be a Bug. This opening-day attraction closed forever on Monday, March 17, 2025, marking the end of the attraction and an entire chapter for the Disney parks. Below are the changes seen in the updated Animal Kingdom map:

  • New front image
  • Different animal trail order
  • Removed Character Greetings section
  • Added information about how long DinoLand U.S.A. will remain open

Aside from the removal of It’s Tough to Be a Bug, Disney also notes in its new updated map that DinoLand U.S.A. will not be around much longer.

DINOSAUR also opened alongside Disney’s Animal Kingdom in 1998, becoming somewhat of a cult classic over the last two decades. While certainly not as beloved or as popular as Pirates of the Caribbean, Haunted Mansion, Space Mountain, and other classics, public opinion on DINOSAUR has grown more and more positive, likely due to the fact that it too will become extinct very soon.

Disney first teased the destruction and overhaul of DINOSAUR at one of the company’s D23 events several years ago, revealing it, along with the rest of DinoLand U.S.A., was on the chopping block. However, Disney originally intended to replace the land with Moana and Zootopia-themed attractions, two franchises that would ultimately get cut from his section of the park as plans changed.

In 2024, Disney revealed its revised plans for DinoLand U.S.A., confirming the land would be transformed into an area inspired by South America. Replacing Chester & Hester’s DinoRama would be a new ride based on Disney’s Encanto, as well as a new carousel.

Disney’s intentions for DINOSAUR are a little more interesting. The company will use the attraction’s bones to build a different experience on top of, one inspired by Indiana Jones. This is somewhat of a poetic ending for DINOSAUR, with the ride itself being a near-carbon copy of Disneyland’s original Indiana Jones Adventure.

While half of DinoLand closed in January, DINOSAUR will remain open through the end of the year, closing forever sometime in early 2026.

An exact timeline for Disney’s DinoLand project is unknown, though it is rumored that the new South America land could be open by 2027.

As mentioned earlier, widespread changes will also soon hit Magic Kingdom and Disney’s Hollywood Studios as Disney begins its massive 2025 revitalization project. Disney announced last year that not only would it be building a new location based on Pixar’s Monsters Inc. franchise at Hollywood Studios, but it would also be building a new area dedicated to Cars, another Pixar property, inside the Magic Kingdom.

These two new projects have proven to be incredibly divisive among both new and longtime Disney World fans, though it seems like Disney is full steam ahead on both, regardless.

Disney also has plans to bring Pandora – The World of Avatar to its West Coast park resort, another decision that has proven to be quite controversial among fans. While the original version of this land has been a big hit since it first opened at Animal Kingdom back in 2017, Disneyland fans aren’t totally convinced the world of James Cameron’s Avatar franchise fits in California.

At the start of last year, Disney confirmed it would be pledging a whopping $60 billion toward investment in its theme parks over the next decade, with 2025 being the start of an exciting and ambitious chapter in the company’s history. Only time will tell what the Walt Disney World Resort will look like a decade from now, but given Disney’s plans for both it and the original Disneyland Resort in California, it’s clear guests can expect both to look quite a bit different.

Will you miss DinoLand U.S.A.?

About Luke Dammann

When at Disney world, Luke will probably be found eating with his favorite animatronic, Sonny Eclipse at Cosmic Ray's Starlight Cafe. When not at Disney World, Luke will probably be found defending Cosmic Ray's Starlight Cafe to people who claim "there are better restaurants"

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