Disney Adventure Cruise Ship Guide: Everything You Need to Know Before You Sail

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Disney Adventure Cruise Ship Guide - Disney Adventure at Port Canaveral | Magic in the Planning

By Alyssa Howard

I have not sailed the Disney Adventure yet, but I have seen her. On January 26, 2026, I was on the deck of the Disney Wish, sailing into Port Canaveral, when she came into view. The Disney Adventure was docked right there, the largest ship Disney Cruise Line had ever built, making a brief stop in Florida on her repositioning voyage to Singapore before her March maiden voyage. She is enormous in a way that photographs do not fully prepare you for. Standing on the Wish looking across at her was one of those moments where the scale of what Disney is doing with this fleet really hit home.

The Adventure is unlike any other ship in this series. She is not a Wish-class ship. She is not a Dream-class ship. She is not a ship Disney designed from scratch. She is the most ambitious, unconventional vessel in the Disney Cruise Line fleet, homeported in Singapore for at least five years, sailing exclusively as a cruise to nowhere, and built around the idea of a floating theme park rather than a traditional cruise ship. That makes her genuinely fascinating and worth understanding before you book.

This Disney Adventure cruise ship guide covers everything you need to know before you sail: the ship’s extraordinary history, the seven themed zones, dining, entertainment, staterooms, the rides, and what makes this ship so different from every other Disney cruise experience.


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Planning to sail on Disney Cruise Line? Be sure to check out our guide to all that Disney Cruise Line has to offer, including itineraries, themed events at sea, and more!


 

Disney Adventure: Quick Facts at a Glance

Here is a snapshot of the basics before we dive in.

  • Christened: March 4, 2026 (godparent: Robert Downey Jr.)
  • Maiden voyage: March 10, 2026
  • Ship class: One of a kind (not Wish-class; converted from the Global Dream)
  • Theme: A floating theme park celebrating 100 years of Disney storytelling
  • Gross tonnage: approximately 208,000
  • Passenger capacity: Up to 6,700 guests
  • Staterooms: 2,110
  • Number of decks: 20
  • Themed zones: 7
  • Dining venues: 20+
  • Specialty dining: Palo Trattoria and Mike & Sulley’s Flavors of Asia
  • Fuel: Liquefied natural gas (LNG)
  • Home port: Marina Bay Cruise Centre, Singapore (through at least 2031)
  • Itinerary type: Cruises to nowhere (no port stops)

Bottom Line: The Disney Adventure is not a traditional cruise ship in the Disney Cruise Line sense. It is the largest ship in the fleet by a significant margin, homeported in Asia, sailing with no port stops, and designed around seven immersive themed zones rather than a single aesthetic. It is the most ambitious thing Disney Cruise Line has ever built, and it is an extraordinary option for families in Singapore and the broader Asia-Pacific region.

 

Ship History and Design

Ocean View on Disney Cruise Line | Magic in the Planning

The Disney Adventure has one of the most remarkable backstories of any ship in the entire Disney Cruise Line fleet, and honestly, it is a story worth knowing before you sail.

She was not designed by Disney. She was not even built for Disney. The Adventure started life as a ship called the Global Dream, originally ordered in 2016 by a company called Genting Hong Kong for their Dream Cruises brand. Construction began at a shipyard in Germany, but COVID-19 hit, the company ran into serious financial trouble, and the whole project collapsed in 2022.

That is when Disney stepped in.

Disney acquired the partially built ship in 2022 for approximately €40 million, then invested around $1 billion to completely redesign and finish her as a Disney cruise ship. What came out the other side is the largest ship in the Disney Cruise Line fleet by a significant margin: 208,000 gross tons, 20 decks, and capacity for around 6,700 guests. For comparison, the Wish-class ships top out around 144,000 gross tons and 4,000 guests. The Adventure is in a different category entirely.

She completed a 58-night repositioning voyage from Germany, crossed the Pacific, and transited the Panama Canal (setting a record as the largest Neopanamax cruise ship to do so) before arriving at Port Canaveral on January 15, 2026. That is where I got my first look at her, from the deck of the Disney Wish on January 26th, the day before she left for Singapore. She was christened on March 4, 2026, by none other than Robert Downey Jr., and her maiden voyage departed March 10, 2026.

The design is built around seven fully immersive themed zones rather than a single cohesive aesthetic, which makes the ship feel more like a Disney theme park than a cruise ship in the most wonderful way. More on those zones in the next section.

Pro Tip: The Adventure’s 20-deck layout is significantly more complex than any other Disney ship. Download the Navigator app and spend time with the deck map before you board. The seven themed zones are distributed across different decks and parts of the ship, and knowing where they are in advance will save you a lot of time on embarkation day.

 

The Seven Themed Zones

This is what makes the Adventure unlike anything else in the fleet. The ship is organized around seven fully realized immersive environments, each themed to a different Disney property and each with its own dining, entertainment, activities, and character experiences.

Disney Imagination Garden (Decks 6–8, Midship)

The heart of the ship and the most dramatic space on board. A three-deck-tall open central atrium anchored by a storybook castle mural rendered to look like a pop-up illustrated book. The Garden Stage at the center hosts live performances, character interactions, and themed entertainment throughout the day and evening. This is the gathering point that connects all the other zones and the first space that makes you understand what kind of ship this is.

Marvel Landing (Deck 18)

The Adventure’s most thrilling zone and home to all three of the ship’s onboard rides. Marvel Landing features the Ironcycle Test Run, at 820 feet the longest roller coaster ever installed on a cruise ship, along with Pym Quantum Racers and Groot Galaxy Spin. The zone also features a Tony Stark-inspired pool and bar, the Marvel Style Studio for Marvel-themed hair and makeup transformations, and Spider-Man character experiences that feel more like performances than traditional meet-and-greets.

Toy Story Place (Deck 17)

A family-friendly outdoor zone inspired by Pixar’s Toy Story, with splash pads, water slides, family pools, and Pizza Planet for casual dining. The energy here is pure fun, and it is where younger kids will gravitate during pool time on sea days.

Disney Discovery Reef (Deck 11)

An outdoor and semi-outdoor zone inspired by The Little Mermaid, Finding Nemo, Lilo and Stitch, and Luca. Discovery Reef glows with bioluminescent lighting effects after dark, transforming into one of the most visually stunning spaces on the ship in the evening. The zone includes Stitch’s ‘Ohana Grill, Bewitching Boba and Brews (an Ursula-themed bubble tea and drinks bar), and Reef View staterooms that overlook the zone.

San Fransokyo Street (Deck 11)

Inspired by Disney’s Big Hero 6, this lantern-lit zone with neon shop signs is home to the Big Hero Arcade, the Hiro Training Zone (an immersive multiplayer training simulator), and Baymax Cinema experiences. The atmosphere is particularly effective at night when the neon and lantern lighting comes fully alive.

Royal Town Square (Deck 6)

The princess-themed zone of the ship, featuring character dining, shops, and entertainment centered around the classic Disney princess stories. This is where families with younger princess fans will want to spend time for character experiences and the more traditional Disney magic that the Adventure shares with the rest of the fleet.

Wayfinder Bay (Pool Deck)

A Moana-themed pool deck and outdoor oasis with the live show Moana: Call of the Sea, ocean views, and a tiered outdoor seating area. The Moana theming brings warmth and Pacific Islander culture to what could have been a generic pool area, and the live show makes it an entertainment destination as well as a place to swim and relax.

 

Dining on the Disney Adventure

Drinks on Disney Cruise Line | Magic in the Planning

With over 20 dining venues on board, the Adventure’s dining lineup is the most expansive in the Disney Cruise Line fleet by a wide margin. The rotational dining system works differently here than on any other Disney ship, with six themed restaurants rotating in pairs rather than three individual restaurants rotating as a set.

Rotational Dining: Six Restaurants in Three Pairs

The Adventure rotates guests through three pairs of themed restaurants, with each pair sharing a rotation slot. Your serving team still rotates with you as on all Disney ships, learning your preferences from night one.

Navigator’s Club and Hollywood Spotlight Club

These two restaurants share the first rotation slot. Navigator’s Club honors the golden age of ocean exploration with a “Captain’s Table” tradition and an elegant maritime atmosphere. Hollywood Spotlight Club transports guests to the glamour of Hollywood’s golden age, with live musical performances and appearances from Mickey, Minnie, Donald, and Daisy in their finest evening wear. The menu across both venues blends international cuisine with Asian-inspired dishes, including standout items like Hainanese chicken rice with ginger garlic sauce and laksa lemak with prawns. The character appearances at Hollywood Spotlight Club are among the most memorable photo opportunities on the ship.

Animator’s Palate and Animator’s Table

The second rotation pair. Animator’s Palate is the Disney Cruise Line classic found across the fleet, where the walls animate during dinner as guests’ own drawings appear on screen in a lively animated finale. The Adventure’s version features menus that incorporate Asian-inspired dishes alongside the fleet’s signature offerings, including Hainanese chicken rice and Laksa Lemak as standout examples of the ship’s Singapore and regional identity. Animator’s Table is a companion restaurant celebrating the same Disney animation heritage in a complementary setting, with the same magical guest-drawing-animation experience.

Enchanted Summer Restaurant and Pixar Market Restaurant

The third pair. Enchanted Summer is a table-service restaurant without entertainment, offering a more relaxed dinner atmosphere for guests who prefer a quieter evening. Pixar Market is a buffet-style venue on Deck 17 with perimeter ocean views, international menus that rotate throughout the sailing, and a lively atmosphere well-suited to families with younger children.

Palo Trattoria

The Adventure’s adults-only specialty Italian restaurant brings the beloved Palo experience back to the fleet in its traditional form, a meaningful differentiator from the Wish-class ships where Palo became Palo Steakhouse. Palo Trattoria serves Northern Italian cuisine in a venue accessible from Decks 10 and 11, with both dinner and brunch available. Book it the moment your check-in window opens.

Mike and Sulley’s Flavors of Asia

The Adventure’s second adults-only specialty restaurant is a premium Asian fusion experience inspired by Monsters, Inc., featuring omakase sushi, wagyu beef, and dishes drawing on the culinary traditions of Singapore and the broader Asia-Pacific region. This is the Adventure’s equivalent of Enchanté or Remy in terms of ambition and price point, and it is the most distinctive specialty dining option in the entire Disney Cruise Line fleet. Reservations are required and will fill up fast.

Quick Service and Casual Dining

The Adventure’s casual dining options are spread across the themed zones: Pizza Planet in Toy Story Place, Stitch’s ‘Ohana Grill and Bewitching Boba and Brews in Discovery Reef, The Jungle Book-inspired Baloo’s Cantina for Indian cuisine, and the Pixar Market buffet among them. The variety and quality of the casual options is meaningfully above what is available on the classic Disney ships. Room service is available and included in your fare.

Bottom Line: The Adventure’s dining lineup is the most varied and ambitious in the Disney Cruise Line fleet. Book Palo Trattoria and Mike and Sulley’s the moment your check-in window opens. If you have only sailed the Wish-class ships and are used to Enchanté and Palo Steakhouse, the return of traditional Palo Trattoria here is genuinely worth celebrating.

 

Entertainment on the Disney Adventure

The Adventure’s entertainment lineup extends far beyond the Walt Disney Theatre, with three onboard rides, multiple live shows across the themed zones, and interactive experiences throughout the ship.

Walt Disney Theatre

The main stage productions on the Adventure are Remember, Avengers Assemble!, and Disney Seas the Adventure.

Remember is an original Broadway-style musical created exclusively for the Disney Adventure, featuring Wall-E and Eve alongside a cast of beloved Disney characters in a heartwarming story about memory, connection, and what endures. It is the ship’s most emotionally resonant production and the one most likely to surprise guests who expect a straightforward adaptation of a known Disney property.

Avengers Assemble! is an action-packed Marvel stage show with jaw-dropping stunts, special effects, and a heroes-versus-villains battle that pushes the limits of what is possible on a shipboard stage. For Marvel fans of any age, this is a highlight of the sailing.

Disney Seas the Adventure is the same beloved first-night welcome show found on the Wish, Treasure, and Destiny, starring Captain Minnie and Goofy sailing into uncharted waters on a journey of discovery. Having seen it on the Wish, I can tell you it is a genuinely joyful, funny, and heartfelt way to begin a cruise. It is one of our daughters’ favorites in the entire fleet, and that experience carries directly to the Adventure.

The Rides: Three Onboard Attractions

This is what makes the Adventure genuinely unprecedented in Disney cruising history. No other Disney ship has onboard rides in the theme park sense.

The Ironcycle Test Run is the longest roller coaster ever installed on a cruise ship at 820 feet, a sleek Iron Man-themed steel coaster on Marvel Landing that delivers genuine thrills. It is the headline attraction of the ship and the experience most likely to earn repeat visits across a sailing.

Pym Quantum Racers is a spinning ride inspired by Ant-Man and the Wasp’s Pym Technologies, using the same scale-shifting concept from the films in a family-friendly attraction.

Groot Galaxy Spin is a gentler spinning attraction themed around Guardians of the Galaxy’s Groot, suitable for younger guests who want to experience Marvel Landing alongside older family members riding the coaster.

Live Entertainment Across the Zones

Beyond the main theater, the Adventure offers a full schedule of live entertainment across its themed zones throughout the day. Moana: Call of the Sea at Wayfinder Bay. The Hiro Training Zone interactive experience in San Fransokyo Street. The Garden Stage shows in Disney Imagination Garden. Character experiences from Frozen, Moana, and the Avengers that appear throughout the ship. The sheer density of entertainment on this ship across a 3- or 4-night sailing is extraordinary.

Kids and Teen Programming

  • Oceaneer Club (ages 3–12): Themed spaces with organized activities, character interactions, and supervised programming.
  • It’s a Small World Nursery (ages 6 months–3 years): Staffed nursery care available for an additional fee.
  • Edge (ages 11–14): Dedicated tween lounge on Deck 7.
  • Vibe (ages 14–17): Teen club with its own programming and social atmosphere.

 

Staterooms on the Disney Adventure

Verandah on Disney Cruise Line | Magic in the Planning

The Adventure’s 2,110 staterooms span a wide range of categories, with some configurations unique to this ship including Garden View Verandah staterooms overlooking the Disney Imagination Garden atrium and Reef View staterooms overlooking Disney Discovery Reef.

Room Categories

  • Inside Staterooms: The most affordable option, well-designed for guests who plan to spend most of their time exploring the ship. If you are maximizing your time in the themed zones, rides, and restaurants, an inside cabin is a practical choice.
  • Oceanview Staterooms: Standard porthole or window cabins with ocean views. A comfortable step up from inside at a modest price increase.
  • Verandah Staterooms: Private balcony cabins. On a cruise to nowhere, the verandah experience is purely about the ocean views and the ability to sit outside at sea rather than watching port approaches, and it is still very much worth it for the lifestyle upgrade at sea.
  • Garden View Verandah Staterooms: Unique to the Adventure, these balcony cabins overlook the Disney Imagination Garden atrium rather than the ocean. For families with young children who want front-row seats to the Garden Stage entertainment from their own cabin, these are extraordinary. The trade-off is that you are looking inward rather than at the sea.
  • Reef View Staterooms: Another Adventure-exclusive category, these cabins overlook Disney Discovery Reef, particularly stunning at night when the bioluminescent lighting transforms the zone.
  • Concierge Staterooms and Suites: The top tier, including the Anna Suite and Elsa Suite, two 2,461-square-foot Royal Suites with private whirlpools on wrap-around verandahs. Concierge guests receive priority boarding, dedicated staff, and exclusive lounge access.

The Split Bathroom

The split bathroom design carries through to the Adventure: toilet and sink in one room, tub or shower and second sink in another. It is the same family-practical feature found across the entire Disney Cruise Line fleet, and it makes a real difference on mornings when everyone is trying to get ready simultaneously.

Pro Tip: The Garden View Verandah staterooms are one of the most distinctive accommodation options in the entire Disney Cruise Line fleet. If you are traveling with young children who would love waking up to the Imagination Garden below them and watching characters appear on the Garden Stage from their own balcony, these cabins are worth seeking out specifically. Mid-ship verandah staterooms on the ocean-facing side are the best balance of motion stability and views for first-time sailors.

 

Disney Adventure Cruise Ship Itineraries: Where Does It Go?

Empty Deck Chairs on Disney Cruise Line | Magic in the Planning

This is the most important thing to understand about the Disney Adventure before you book: it does not go anywhere. Every sailing is a cruise to nowhere, meaning the ship departs Singapore, spends the sailing days at sea, and returns to Singapore without stopping at any port. The ship itself is the destination in its entirety.

3-Night Sailings (Mondays)

Three-night sailings depart Marina Bay Cruise Centre every Monday and return on Thursday. This is the entry-level Disney Adventure experience and the most affordable way to sail the ship. Three nights gives you enough time to experience most of the themed zones, see the main shows, ride the attractions, and dine at each of your three rotational restaurant pairs at least once.

4-Night Sailings (Thursdays)

Four-night sailings depart every Thursday and return on Monday. The extra night gives you more time to revisit favorite restaurants, fit in additional shows, explore zones you may have rushed through on a shorter sailing, and make a proper evening out of Palo Trattoria or Mike and Sulley’s. For first-time Disney Adventure guests, the 4-night sailing is the better introduction.

Singapore Home Port Through 2031

Disney has committed to Singapore as the Adventure’s exclusive home port through at least 2031 under an agreement with the Singapore Tourism Board. The ship will not home port in the United States or any other American port during this period. For families based in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, India, or other parts of the Asia-Pacific region, the Adventure is extraordinarily convenient. For US-based guests, it represents a genuinely special destination cruise that combines a Disney sailing with a Singapore travel experience.

Pro Tip: For US-based families considering the Adventure, Singapore itself is one of the most family-friendly travel destinations in the world, with exceptional food, safety, attractions including Universal Studios Singapore and Gardens by the Bay, and world-class airports. Adding two or three days in Singapore before or after a Disney Adventure sailing makes for an extraordinary combined vacation. Disney has offered complimentary Singapore hotel nights with select bookings, so watch for those promotions when planning your trip.

 

The Disney Adventure vs. the Rest of the Fleet

This is not really an apples-to-apples comparison, because the Adventure is genuinely a different kind of Disney cruise experience from every other ship in the fleet. But here is the honest breakdown for families trying to decide.

The Adventure is the largest ship in the fleet by nearly 50% in tonnage and roughly 60% in guest capacity. The extra scale makes it feel more like a theme park than a cruise ship in the best possible sense: more zones, more rides, more restaurants, more happening at any given moment. It is also significantly less intimate than the Magic-class ships and meaningfully less intimate than even the Wish-class ships.

What the Adventure has that no other Disney ship does: three onboard rides (including the longest roller coaster at sea), seven fully immersive themed zones, six rotational dining restaurants, the traditional Palo Trattoria Italian specialty restaurant, and Mike and Sulley’s premium Asian fusion dining. All sailings are cruises to nowhere from Singapore.

What the other ships have that the Adventure does not: port stops, Castaway Cay and Lookout Cay, the Wish-class specialty restaurants (Enchanté and Palo Steakhouse), and accessibility from US home ports. The classic ships also offer the intimacy and navigability that the Adventure’s scale makes harder to achieve.

If your family is in Singapore or planning a Singapore vacation, the Adventure is an extraordinary experience unlike anything else Disney Cruise Line offers. If you are US-based and comparing it to the Wish or Destiny for a Florida cruise, they are genuinely different products serving different needs.

 

Insider Tips for First-Time Disney Adventure Sailors

  • Book Palo Trattoria and Mike and Sulley’s the moment your check-in window opens. Both specialty restaurants fill up fast. If dinner at Mike and Sulley’s is gone, check for alternative time slots.
  • Ride the Ironcycle Test Run on embarkation day. Lines build quickly once the ship is underway. The coaster typically opens during or just after embarkation, and getting there early means shorter waits.
  • Visit the Garden Stage in Disney Imagination Garden on your first evening. The atrium entertainment is one of the most distinctive things about this ship, and experiencing it early orients you to the heart of the ship’s design.
  • Explore Disney Discovery Reef after dark. The bioluminescent lighting effects that activate in the evening transform this zone into one of the most visually stunning spaces on the ship. Do not only see it in daylight.
  • Choose your stateroom category with intention. The Garden View Verandah and Reef View staterooms are completely unique to this ship and worth considering specifically if those zones align with your family’s interests.
  • Tell your rotational dining server everything on night one. The serving team rotates with you across all your dining experiences, and the more they know about your preferences and dietary needs from the beginning, the better every subsequent meal becomes.
  • Plan your Marvel Landing visit across multiple times of day. The Marvel zone operates differently at different times, with character experiences and scheduled programming in the morning and evening alongside the rides. Check the Navigator app for the full daily schedule.
  • For US guests: plan your Singapore time carefully. Two to three days before or after the sailing gives you time to recover from jet lag, see the city’s highlights, and arrive at Marina Bay Cruise Centre relaxed rather than rushed.
  • Use the Navigator app from before you board. The Adventure’s scale and programming density make the app more essential here than on any other Disney ship. Character appearances, show times, ride availability, and dining reservations all live there.
  • On a 3-night sailing, prioritize. You cannot do everything in three nights on this ship. Decide in advance which rides, shows, and dining experiences matter most to your family and build your days around those first.

 

Is the Disney Adventure Right for Your Family?

The Disney Adventure is a great fit if you:

  • Are based in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, India, or the broader Asia-Pacific region
  • Are planning a Singapore vacation and want to add a Disney cruise to the trip
  • Want a theme park-style cruise experience with onboard rides, seven immersive zones, and over 20 dining venues
  • Are thrillseekers who want the Ironcycle Test Run, the longest roller coaster ever installed on a cruise ship
  • Want the traditional Palo Trattoria Italian specialty restaurant (not available on the Wish-class ships)
  • Want Mike and Sulley’s premium Asian fusion dining, the most distinctive specialty restaurant in the fleet
  • Are traveling with a wide range of ages and want the most varied onboard offering Disney has ever built

You might want to consider a different ship if you:

  • Are based in the US and not planning a Singapore trip (the ship will not sail from US ports through at least 2031)
  • Want port stops, Castaway Cay, or Lookout Cay (the Adventure sails exclusively as a cruise to nowhere)
  • Prefer the intimate scale of the Magic or Wonder
  • Are specifically looking for Enchanté (Wish-class exclusive), Palo Steakhouse (Wish-class), Arendelle (Wish exclusive), Plaza de Coco (Treasure exclusive), or Pride Lands (Destiny exclusive)
  • Want a longer Caribbean, Alaska, or European itinerary

Bottom Line: The Disney Adventure is the most ambitious ship Disney Cruise Line has ever launched, and it is doing something no other ship in the fleet is doing: bringing Disney theme park-level immersion to sea, with rides, seven themed zones, and over 20 restaurants, in a home port that makes it one of the most accessible Disney vacations in the world for families across Asia. I saw her from the deck of the Wish, and she was extraordinary even just docked at a distance. She is on my list, and she should be on yours too if a Singapore trip is ever in your future.

 

Disney Cruise Line Planning Resources

Ready to start planning your Disney Adventure cruise? Here are some of our most popular guides to help you get started!

The Complete Guide to Planning a Disney Cruise
Everything you need to know about booking, preparing for, and making the most of a Disney Cruise Line vacation, from choosing your ship and itinerary to what to pack and what to expect on board.
Read the full guide

The Ultimate Disney Cruise Line Dining Guide
A comprehensive look at dining across the Disney Cruise Line fleet, including how rotational dining works, what to expect at specialty restaurants, and tips for making the most of every meal at sea.
Read the full guide

Disney Destiny Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Destiny, including the exclusive Pride Lands: Feast of the Lion King dining experience, Disney Hercules, the villain character experiences, and what makes this the boldest ship in the fleet.
Read the full guide

Disney Treasure Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Treasure, including the exclusive Plaza de Coco dining experience, Disney The Tale of Moana, the Haunted Mansion Parlor, and what makes this the most elaborately themed ship in the fleet.
Read the full guide

Disney Wish Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Wish, including its immersive rotational dining at 1923, Worlds of Marvel, and Arendelle, the AquaMouse water coaster, Palo Steakhouse, Enchanté, and what makes this ship the most technologically ambitious in the fleet.
Read the full guide

Disney Fantasy Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Fantasy, including Pixar Day at Sea, the Aladdin stage show, year-round sailing from Port Canaveral, and why this ship is one of the best in the fleet for families with young children.
Read the full guide

Disney Dream Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Dream, including its exclusive Remy fine dining restaurant, the AquaDuck water coaster, the stunning Enchanted Garden dining room, and what makes this ship one of the best in the fleet for couples and families alike.
Read the full guide

Disney Magic Cruise Ship Guide
Everything you need to know about the Disney Magic, including ship-exclusive dining at Lumiere’s, the Broadway-caliber Tangled: The Musical, and what makes the original Disney cruise ship still one of the best in the fleet.
Read the full guide

Disney Wonder Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Wonder, including its exclusive Tiana’s Place restaurant, entertainment lineup, staterooms, Alaska itineraries, and what makes this classic intimate ship such a beloved choice for Disney cruisers.
Read the full guide

 

Looking to plan your Disney Cruise Line vacation? Be sure to visit my resource library for printable guides and planning worksheets!

And be sure to visit the official website for Disney Cruise Line for more information about all they have to offer!

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