Disney Confirms Heartbreaking Loss: TRON Experience Permanently Closes at Magic Kingdom, Ending Iconic Era
Which Experience/Ride Is Gone Forever?
Magic Kingdom closed down a TRON experience forever, leaving most fans confused and others wondering what will be axed next.

Magic Kingdom TRON Experience Removed Completely From Park
The neon glow of Tomorrowland pulsed under the Florida sun as a family rushed toward the unmistakable hum of high-speed cycles, only to find stanchions blocking a nearby door. Whispers spread like wildfire: “Did they shut down TRON forever?” Hearts sank for a split second—what would become of that adrenaline rush after the longest queue of the day? But hold on: the real story unfolding in Magic Kingdom’s Tomorrowland is far less catastrophic, and a lot more intriguing.

Confusion Grips Magic Kingdom as TRON Page Vanishes
Disney quietly scrubbed the TRON Identity Program page from the official Walt Disney World website on December 31, 2025, sparking immediate panic among fans who mistook it for news on the blockbuster TRON Lightcycle / Run roller coaster. The paid customization experience, housed in the Tomorrowland Launch Depot near the ride’s exit, allowed guests to craft personalized “Program” action figures using facial scans, voice recordings, and custom options like helmets and team colors.
Cast members confirmed that day as the final operating day, with stations blocked off and display figures removed, while the old webpage now redirects to a cheeky “Someone Ate the Page!” Stitch graphic.
Originally launched alongside TRON Lightcycle / Run, the program debuted at $89.99 plus tax, but Disney slashed it to $50 starting June 3, 2025—a move signaling softening demand after its first year of reservations shifted to walk-ups. I’ve covered countless Magic Kingdom openings, and experiences like this one promised to blend digital personalization with tangible souvenirs, much like the D-Tech stations that just shuttered in the same building. For superfans, it was a chance to take home a mini-you battling on the Grid—until it wasn’t.

Construction Permits Hint at Tomorrowland’s Next Move
Two Notices of Commencement surfaced recently for addresses tied to Tomorrowland Light & Power and Launch Depot (4950C N World Drive), both listing Disney’s in-house Buena Vista Construction Company. The permits call for “labor, material and/or electrical for construction,” a vague scope typical of Buena Vista’s smaller gigs like kiosk removals or interior tweaks—not the heavy lifting of major redevelopments. Disney has offered no official comment on the closure or future plans, leaving speculation to fill the void.
Key Timeline for TRON Identity Closure:
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Opened: April 2023 with TRON Lightcycle / Run
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Price Drop: $89.99 to $50 on June 3, 2025
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Final Day: December 31, 2025—stations stanchioned off
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Website Change: Page removed, Stitch error graphic appears
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Permits Filed: Recent notices for Launch Depot space
This pattern echoes other third-party personalization exits, as Disney reevaluates partnerships amid rising operational costs.

Why Fans Loved—and Now Miss—TRON Identity
Step inside the dimly lit Launch Depot, and the process felt straight out of the Grid: facial capture for your Program’s face, choices for sleek helmets, lithe bodies, glowing team colors, and recording six custom voice lines to bring it alive. Families emerged clutching 6-inch figures ready for display or play, a perfect post-ride memento that captured the thrill of hurtling at 60 mph on lightcycles. Demand peaked early, but the discount hinted at quieter days, especially as walk-up only became the norm in early 2025.
“I’ve seen guests light up like kids on Christmas getting their custom Programs,” one cast member shared in fan forums, echoing the emotional pull of personalized Disney magic. For theme park collectors like me—who’ve chased Lorcana cards and MESBG minis—this was peak immersion, turning a ride exit into a creation station. Its end stings, especially amid broader Tomorrowland shifts post-TRON’s debut.

What Lies Ahead for Tomorrowland Launch Depot?
Buena Vista’s involvement points to modest changes: perhaps retail tweaks, new merchandising for TRON Lightcycle / Run, or space to ease post-ride congestion. No signs suggest major ride work or expansions here, especially with Villains Land and Cars Land gobbling Imagineering’s focus elsewhere in Magic Kingdom. Guests can still grab identity discs and apparel nearby, but the hands-on figure-building era joins shuttered D-Tech as a relic of Disney’s personalization push.
Pros and Cons of the Closure:
| Aspect | Pro | Con |
|---|---|---|
| Cost Savings | Frees space for high-traffic retail | Ends unique $50 souvenir option |
| Guest Flow | Reduces bottlenecks near TRON exit | Loses interactive draw for families |
| Future Potential | Room for TRON merch expansion | No announced replacement yet |

Impact on Magic Kingdom Guests and Collectors
The mix-up with TRON Lightcycle / Run rumors flooded social media, with fans venting confusion over the ride’s future—only to learn the coaster roars on. Reactions range from relief (“Thank goodness the ride’s safe!”) to nostalgia (“RIP my dream figure”). As a journalist who’s queued hours for Tomorrowland thrills, I get it: these add-ons elevate rides from spectacle to story.
Long-term, expect subtle enhancements keeping the TRON vibe alive without the premium price tag. Disney’s silence fuels buzz, but history shows quiet closures often precede fan-favorite tweaks. If you’re hitting Magic Kingdom soon, snap pics of Launch Depot—change cycles fast on the Grid.



