The tallest and fastest roller coaster in the world.  Frequently heard  phrases from the millions of people who have been on these terrible  rides include: "Ohhhh noooo", "S&%t!" and the classic "We're gonna  die!". Watching the videos is a must.
 Arms down, head back and hold on. With only 28 seconds, the Kingda Ka  may not be very long, but it's bound to leave you wide eyed and  twitching. Located at Six Flags Great Adventure in New Jersey, USA, it's  the tallest and fastest roller coaster in the world. The 
  is launched by a hydraulic launch mechanism to 128 miles per hour (206  km/h) in 3.5 seconds. At the end of the launch track, the train climbs  the main top hat tower, reaching a height of 456 feet (139 meters)! At a  cost of US$25 million, the Kingda Ka opened to the public on May 21,  2005, was closed several times for different technical problems and was  also struck by lightning in early May 2009. 
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 Dodonpa: the highest launch acceleration, 2.7 g
 Dodonpa: the highest launch acceleration, 2.7 g

 Dodonpa 
messes with your mind  from the moment it starts, as passengers are forced to wait anxiously in  a darkened tunnel before the countdown to an insanely fast acceleration  out of the tunnel, screaming down the track and then getting fired up  and over two humps which have 90 degree drops on each side. When the  Dodonpa was opened in 2001, it was the fastest roller coaster in the  world. As of 2010, it is not the fastest but still has the highest  launch acceleration at 2.7 g. It is 52 meters (170 feet) tall, and has a  launch speed of 172 km/h (107 mph), which is reached in less than 2  seconds. Located at Fuji-Q Highland, Fujiyoshida, Yamanashi, Japan, its  hill goes straight up, down a hairpin curve, and then goes straight  down. 
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 Steel Dragon 2000: the world's longest track length, 8,133ft
 Steel Dragon 2000: the world's longest track length, 8,133ft

 Built by 
Morgan Manufacturing, this gigacoaster at Nagashima Spa Land Amusement 
Park  in Mie Prefecture, Japan, opened in 2000 — "The Year of the Dragon" in  Asia. It debuted only months after Millennium Force and surpassed the  Cedar Point coaster as the world's tallest complete-circuit coaster. You  might be used to getting on a roller coaster and stepping off much  sooner than you hoped - scream, scream and it's all over. Not on this  ride - the 
Steel Dragon is quite  the endurance coaster. It's so long that you might actually deplete your  ability to scream by the end of the record breaking 8,133ft long track,  the one record it still holds.
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 Top Thrill Dragster: Kingda Ka's arch rival
 Top Thrill Dragster: Kingda Ka's arch rival

 Kingda Ka's arch rival, the Top Thrill Dragster was the first "Strata Coaster", loosely 
defined as a complete circuit coaster that is over 400 feet tall. Located at Cedar Point Amusement Park  in Sandusky, Ohio, USA, it reaches speeds of up to 120 miles per hour  (190 km/h) and when it first debuted in 2003, it set three new records:  tallest, fastest and steepest drop on a roller coaster; all of them  later claimed by the Kingda Ka.
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 Thunder Dolphin: Tokyo's most terrifying ride
 Thunder Dolphin: Tokyo's most terrifying ride

 Known for its unique design around 
buildings in central Tokyo's Dome City Attractions amusement park, the Thunder 
Dolphin  starts off with a dizzying 218 foot lunge at a steep 80 degree angle.  You then race around the track at speeds in excess of 80 mph making this  impressive 3,500-foot long, 26-story tall a mental joyride. The ride  passes through both a hole in the LaQua building, as well as through the  Big-O, the world's first hubless Ferris wheel. Thunder Dolphin's maximum speed is 130 km per hour, or 80 miles per hour.
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 Tower of Terror: the fastest and tallest flat ride in the world
 Tower of Terror: the fastest and tallest flat ride in the world

 Located at Dreamworld in 
the Gold Coast, 
Australia,  it is currently the fourth fastest roller coaster in the world, but it  has been reported to be the fastest and tallest roller coaster on a  tower. The six ton passenger vehicle, called the 'Escape Pod', is  electro-magnetically powered and rapidly accelerates its passengers to  160.9 km/h (100 mph) in seven seconds. The track then pitches up 90  degrees to the vertical, with the passengers pulling 4.5Gs. Riders are  weightless during the entire vertical section of the ride for about 6.5  sec, 3.25 seconds going up and 3.25 seconds falling back down. The car  then pitches back down to horizontal and hurtles back into the station  where it comes to a rapid stop. There has been some controversy over  whether Tower of Terror is a roller coaster, since the car goes up a  tower only to fall back down again. Because of this, the ride is found  on many lists of the tallest and fastest roller coasters.
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 Millennium Force: most G-force at one time (4.5 times Earths gravity) and the longest track in the US
 Millennium Force: most G-force at one time (4.5 times Earths gravity) and the longest track in the US

 Also located at the Cedar Point Amusement Park in Sandusky, Ohio, USA,  the Millennium Force was the first roller coaster to exceed 300 feet in  height back in the year 2000, and was briefly the tallest closed circuit  roller coaster in the world, before being surpassed by the roller  coasters already mentioned. At the tallest section you'll endure a  stomach-churning 300ft drop; passengers rush and plunge along the track  through two separate dark tunnels and two crazy 122 degree overbanked  turns that produce a gut-wrenching G force. It is still the longest steel roller coaster in the United States with 6,595ft of steel  track and goes up to 93 mph (150 km/h), lasting 2 minutes and 20  seconds, and being capable of handling up to 1,600 riders per hour.
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