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← Kay Analysis

Generated May 26, 2026  ·  rare-credits

Sooperdooperlooper

Hersheypark  ·  Schwarzkopf

One of the few surviving Schwarzkopf loopers in the US. Anton Schwarzkopf's machines from the 1970s–80s are legendary for their smooth, powerful ride. Most have been removed.

Jet Star 2

Lagoon  ·  Schwarzkopf

Classic Schwarzkopf shuttle/jet-star design. A relic from the golden age of European coaster engineering.

Colossus the Fire Dragon

Lagoon  ·  Schwarzkopf

Custom Schwarzkopf looper — Lagoon has an unusually rich collection of surviving Schwarzkopf hardware.

Flying Turns

Knoebels Amusement Resort  ·  GravKraft

One of the only wooden bobsled coasters in existence — a type that was common in the early 20th century but nearly extinct. Knoebels built this in-house over several years. A genuinely irreplaceable credit.

Cannibal

Lagoon  ·  S&S

Designed and partially built by Lagoon's in-house team with S&S. At the time of opening it had the steepest drop of any steel coaster in the world (116°). One-of-a-kind.

Flying Turns

Knoebels

Wooden bobsled — fewer than a handful exist worldwide. Knoebels' version took over a decade to design and build in-house. You cannot ride this type of coaster at any major chain park.

El Toro

Six Flags Great Adventure

Intamin prefabricated wooden coaster — a design type Intamin has since abandoned. Consistently ranked among the top wooden coasters in the world.

Ex Scream Machine

Western Idaho Fair

Portable/traveling steel coaster — fair rides are not catalogued by RCDB.

⚠ Traveling fair coasters are often debated as credits. Counting them is a valid choice but puts you in the minority among enthusiasts.

Smoky Mountain Alpine Coaster

Gatlinburg

Alpine/gravity coaster on a mountain slope.

⚠ Alpine coasters are the most contested credit type in the hobby. They are gravity-powered and have no chain lift, which leads many enthusiasts to not count them. Kay counts it — that's a valid but bold stance.

Gemini at Cedar Point is counted as two credits — Gemini (Red) and Gemini (Blue). This is the enthusiast-standard approach for dual-track racing coasters where both sides have meaningfully different layouts or ride characteristics.
The alpine coaster in Gatlinburg is counted. This places Kay in the credit-maximalist camp — she counts everything that moves on a track.

💎 Extremely Rare

Flying TurnsCannibal

⭐ Rare

SooperdooperlooperJet Star 2Colossus the Fire DragonEl Toro

Notable

Steel VengeanceLightning RodKingda KaMillennium Force
Kay's rarity profile is anchored by the Lagoon credits — that park has preserved an unusual number of Schwarzkopf machines that have been scrapped elsewhere. Flying Turns at Knoebels is the crown jewel: it's a type of ride that barely exists anymore. The alpine coaster count reveals a maximalist counting philosophy, which is a totally coherent position even if it's divisive.