Joyland, a Chinese theme park due to open its doors in May this year, looks to be at least partly inspired by the games of Blizzard Entertainment.
The park, located in Changzhou, is built around the idea of taking âkey scenery in cyber-games and [rebuilding] them into reality, enabling visitors to interact between the real and the virtual worldâ. Itâll feature traditional rides as well as locations for âcyber-gamingâ (so, internet cafes).
Thatâs all well and good until you look at the names of the parkâs different areas. Thereâs the âTerrain of Warcraftâ. Not like World of Warcraft at all, that. Thereâs also the âUniverse Of Starcraftâ. Which is, well, it actually goes and uses the word âStarcraftâ, albeit in a font where you could easily mistake âStarcraftâ for âStorcroftâ.
Other familiar-looking sections include âMoles Worldâ, which looks a lot like Dr. Suessâ Landing from Universal Studioâs Islands of Adventure, the parkâs logo, which again looks very similar to that of Islands of Adventure, and this appearance from Assassinâs Creed star Altair
Sure, this stuff may all be totally above-board, but thereâs not a single Blizzard or Ubisoft logo to be found on the parkâs website, so make of that what you will.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tqy0Lx-q8Fw
Before you cry hoax, it appears the park is at least in some manner ârealâ, as these construction shots from 2010 reveal. You can also see a video of the parkâs progress to your left. Whether itâll actually make its May opening date â or whether itâll open in any state similar to these promo images â remains to be seen.
If this stuff does turn out to be âborrowedâ from existing properties and not officially licensed, it of course wouldnât be anything new for China. A theme park recently copied Japanese mech icon Gundam, while thereâs a bootleg Disneyland in Beijing
https://lastchance.cc/orange-you-glad-china-has-a-giant-mecha-5710035%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Weâve contacted Blizzard for comment, and will update if we hear back.