At its 1971 opening, the rides included Goldrusher, a steel coaster, the Log Jammer log flume, the Sky Tower observation tower, Grand Prix (similar to Disneyland's Autopia ride), El Bumpo, Funicular, The Metro (a monorail ride that encircled the park), "Eagles Flight" Skyride, a Carousel, and other smaller rides. The Showcase Theater (now known as the Golden Bear Theater), was part of the original park and featured Barbara Streisand as the first of many headline performers who would appear at Magic Mountain over the years.
In the 1971 season, Magic Mountain obtained permission from Warner Bros. to use the Looney Tunes cartoon characters. However, the park did not begin using these characters for nearly ten years. Instead, in 1972, they began using trolls as the park mascots. The trolls Bleep, Bloop, and King Troll, and the Wizard became a recognizable symbol of Magic Mountain. These characters were used until 1985. Also in 1972, a second log flume named Jet Stream was added.
In 1973, the park added its second roller coaster, the Mountain Express, a compact wild mouse roller coaster. It had small cars and several tight, fast turns. In 1974 the park also installed a new complex of spinning Tilt-A-Whirl rides in what would later be known as Back Street. The new additions consisted of the Himalaya, Electric Rainbow, and Tumble Drum. In 1975, the Grand Centennial Railway opened in the Back Street. It took riders on a train journey to Spillikin Corners and back.
In 1978, Colossus, at the time the fastest, largest dual-tracked wooden coaster, had opened. Following its first season, it was closed and extensively redone. When it reopened, it was a much smoother ride. In 1991, the camel hump before the last, or third, turn was replaced by a block brake. Though it decreased the speed of the ride after this particular brake, it did allow three trains to run per side at a time, greatly increasing capacity. One of the trains sometimes ran backwards for a few years in the mid-80s. However, until the late 1990s this kind of ride was no longer possible due to the newer ride system in place, as well as different trains. During Fright Fest, the park runs one side backwards using a set of trains acquired from the now demolished Psyclone.
In 1979, the park was sold to Six Flags and became known as Six Flags Magic Mountain in 1980. In 1981, Six Flags Magic Mountain introduced a ride that was on the west coast for the first time called Roaring Rapids. It was developed by Intamin AG in conjunction with Six Flags AstroWorld, which had opened a similar ride in 1979. Along with Rapids came the completion of the midway near Spillikin Corners to link with the Revolution area. Finally a complete circuit could be made around the park. The rapids ride was originally designed as a dual-sided station, but only one was fully developed. All that exists of the possible second side is a few supports. Rapids uses some huge pumps to circulate water. Each pump (there are two) can circulate 88,500 gallons per minute. The Rapids reservoir can hold 1.5 million gallons of water. One of the least impressive things about Roaring Rapids was the introduction of guide boards to help eliminate jam ups.
In 1982, Freefall was added. At the time, it was considered cutting edge, if not strictly a "roller coaster." The ride simply ascends the tower and then drops, with the track curving to horizontal, leaving riders on their backs. Others were built for other parks (some of which are Six Flags). Today, most of these rides are obsolete and have been removed. Some flat rides were added and others removed the next year.
In 1984, the Sarajevo Bobsleds was erected. The coaster was basically a bobsled without ice and snow. The coaster was built in honor of the 1984 Olympics. Six Flags Great Adventure added a similar ride that same year. In 1986, the bobsled was removed and now operates at Six Flags Over Texas. The other bobsled was moved to Six Flags Great America and later to The Great Escape in Lake George, New York, where it still operates.
In 1985, Children's World was re-themed as Bugs Bunny World, as Magic Mountain had abandoned the Trolls in favor of the Warner Brothers' characters. In 1986, the park added a steel stand-up looping roller coaster called Shockwave designed by Intamin AG. This coaster was located in the back of the park replacing Sarajevo Bobsleds. At the end of 1988, the coaster was removed as part of a ride rotation program and went to Six Flags Great Adventure in 1990. It was removed from there in 1992 and was repainted white and rethemed upon its removal to Six Flags Astroworld. There it was known as Batman The Escape. When Astroworld closed in 2005, the ride was put in storage at Darien Lake, now no longer a Six Flags park.
Six Flags Magic Mountain installed Z-Force in 1987. It was removed in 1994 for Batman The Ride. Along with Z-Force came Back Street, a re-theming of the area surrounding Z-Force. Spinning flat rides were renamed Turbo (Electric Rainbow), Subway (Himalaya), and Reactor (Enterprise). The dance club was re-themed as well, and located near Reactor. After Hours, as it was now called (formerly Decibels), for one summer stayed open later than the rest of the park. It, along with Back Street, would stay open an additional two hours as a place for locals to hang out. This format lasted one season.
Tidal Wave opened in 1989 to rather large crowds. It is a short, wet ride. A large boat goes up a low-angled incline to a level water trough. The trough, in the shape of a semicircle, ends in a steep drop that leads to a very large splashpool. When the car hits the pool, it displaces large amounts of water on its riders. The ride's exit ramp crosses over the splashpool, causing unwary patrons leaving the ride to get soaked, yet again. In the summer, the exit ramp is a popular place to cool down from the (frequently) 100-degree heat.
In 1990, Viper, a multiple looping coaster designed by Arrow opened. It features a 188 foot drop, speeds up to 70 MPH , 3 vertical loops, a batwing turn that inverts riders twice, and a double corkscrew.
In 1991, Magic Mountain added Psyclone, modeled after the Coney Island Cyclone. The Spillikin Corners area of the park was re-themed as Cyclone Bay to suit the new coaster, drawing guests into this area. The change was largely cosmetic, as the earlier theme relied on retail establishments that had been removed previously. The Glass Blower had been replaced by the Shooting Gallery, and the Candy Kitchen viewing area was redesigned. With Psyclone, the crowds returned. Still, the ride itself was very rough. (The coaster was later removed in 2007.) After adding Ninja, Viper, and Psyclone within 4 years, the park was getting a large repertoire of big roller coasters.
The next year, 1992, a coaster built by Intamin AG called Flashback was added. This ride had already been at Six Flags Great America and then Six Flags Over Georgia prior to its arrival. Very steep, short drops were designed to make riders feel like they are "diving" down in a plane, and it ends in a 540 upward spiral. But, because of the shoulder harnesses, riders are subjected to a lot of head banging. This coaster rarely ran by 1996 and on January 23, 2007, it was announced by the park that Flashback would be removed along with Psyclone, however, the park also stated that Flashback may be re-built within the park for 2008. The ride was finally demolished for scrap at the end of 2007.
In 1993, Six Flags Magic Mountain entered the Time Warner era. The new ride for the year was Yosemite Sam Sierra Falls. It is a water park water ride that has two twisting tubes that riders could slide down in using a raft. Also that year, there was re-theming and High Sierra Territory was opened. The Showcase Theatre became Golden Bear Theater, the Animal Star Theatre was created in Bugs Bunny World, and a large, fake, wooden tree was built. This year saw the end of live concerts in the park due to the riot that broke out after the cancellation of a TLC concert.
In 1994 Magic Mountain added what two other Six Flags parks already had, a Bolliger & Mabillard inverted looping rollercoaster called Batman The Ride (which other Six Flags parks also added in the coming years). Batman the Ride (BTR) is an inverted coaster, meaning the usual coaster protocol is reversed. The track is overhead and the cars are below it. The trains travel on the outside of the loops, and rider's legs hang freely, as on a ski lift.
In 1995, no new rides were opened. Instead, a separately gated waterpark called Hurricane Harbor opened in June. That park included a bunch of typical body slides, tube slides, a kiddie water play area, lazy river, and a wavepool.
2001 was to be the year of three new rollercoasters, but only one actually opened, Goliath Jr., a steel kiddie coaster; the other two, Déjà Vu and X (now X2), had mechanical problems. Déjà Vu opened late in 2001 and X opened early in 2002. Déjà Vu was designed by Vekoma and is a variant of their popular Boomerang design. It is an inverted coaster with coaches suspended beneath an overhead track that traverses an open-circuit track forward and in reverse and features two completely vertical drops and three inversions. It opened late in 2001, but suffered a lot of downtime. X was designed by Arrow Dynamics, it was the worlds first (and today one of only two in the world) Fourth Dimensional roller coaster. It is the only one in North America where riders pitch forwards and backwards in seats that lie on a separate axis from the track. This coaster managed to open briefly in early 2002 only to close due to more technical problems. It reopened late in August of that year. The ride closed for a major refurbishment and re-theme in 2008 where X transformed into X2.
In 2003, Scream!, designed by Bolliger & Mabillard was added. At this point, Six Flags Magic Mountain tied with Cedar Point for the park with the most roller coasters in the United States. Scream is similar in concept with Medusa at Six Flags Great Adventure and at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom. It is a floorless roller coaster with trains riding above the rails traversing seven inversions on 3,985-feet of track on floorless coaches. Six Flags Magic Mountain made few changes in 2004 and 2005. In 2006, Tatsu, a Bolliger & Mabillard Flying Coaster was added. It was much larger than the three B&M flyers at the other Six Flags parks. The coaster has a suspended-track orientation featuring vehicles that recline passengers with their backs against the track and facing the ground. This brought the park up to 17 roller coasters and Six Flags Magic Mountain eclipsed Cedar Point for the greatest number of roller coasters in a park.
The increase in ticket prices alone suggest that even with diminished attendance, the park's revenues should have risen. Throughout the Six Flags chain, attendance in the second quarter of 2006 was 14 percent lower than it was in the second quarter of 2005. 
By the fall of 2006 Six Flags announced that Magic Mountain was still up for sale. They also stated, however, that it would be sold to a company that would continue to run it as a park and that the closing of Magic Mountain was not a possibility. Cedar Fair, Hershey, and several others considered buying the park but none of the offers came close to the asking price.
When Six Flags announced which parks it was selling in January 2007, Magic Mountain was no longer one of them. The company decided not to sell Magic Mountain and its adjacent water park. Spokeswoman Wendy Goldberg said that upon further evaluation, the company decided that the Los Angeles parks remained too valuable to let go as season passes and sales were up, and the park would not be sold. Other parks were sold as a single unit and remained open.
In 2008, the park started work on creating the Magic of the Mountain museum at the top of the Sky Tower with memorabilia throughout the park's history, including old television commercials, park maps, models, and parts of rides.
| Ride | Year Opened | Manufacturer | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Atom Smasher | 1974 | Mack | A Mack Musik Express ride known in the past as Himalaya from 1974-1986; Subway from 1987-1993, and ACME Atom Smasher from 1994-2004. |
| Batman: The Ride | 1994 | B&M | Floorless coaches suspended beneath an overhead track whip around steeply banked turns and five inversions. |
| Buccaneer | 1980 | Intamin AG | This Intamin Bounty swinging pirate ship ride opened in 1980 and was built on the Galaxy's old site. |
| Canyon Blaster | 1999 | Miler Coaster Company | Small junior roller coaster for children and pre-teens. |
| Colossus | 1978 | International Amusement Devices | This massive dual-tracked wooden roller coaster was the tallest in the world upon debut. |
| Cyclone 500 | 1992 | J & J | A Go-Kart track near where Psyclone once stood. |
| Dive Devil | 1996 | SkyCoaster, Inc. | This freefall swing ride requires an extra charge. |
| Déjà Vu | 2001 | Vekoma | It is the biggest boomerang roller coaster in the world. Inverted floorless coaches suspended beneath an overhead track traverse an open-circuit track forward and in reverse -- featuring two completely vertical drops and three inversions. |
| Goldrusher | 1971 | Arrow Dynamics | A steel "mine train" roller coaster that utilizes the park's unique terrain to its design advantage. |
| Goliath | 2000 | Giovanola | Steel hypercoaster featuring an opening drop of 255-feet into a subterranean tunnel. |
| Grand Carrousel | 1971 | Philadelphia Toboggan Inc. | This 1912 merry-go-round is located near Revolution. It was removed in the 1960s from the Savin Rock Amusement area in West Haven, Connecticut and sold to Magic Mountain. |
| Grinder Gearworks | 1974 | Hrubetz | Round Up ride; known in the past as: Electric Rainbow from 1974-1986, Turbo from 1987-1993 and Gordon Gearworks from 1994-1998. |
| Jet Stream | 1972 | Arrow Dynamics | A log flume ride located under the Ninja roller coaster. Known from 2001-2006 as Arrowhead Splashdown. |
| Log Jammer | 1971 | Arrow Dynamics | This classic log flume has two lifts and three drops. |
| Metro | 1971 | Universal Mobility | This monorail ride has been standing but not operating since 2001. As of 2008, the park does not have plans to re-open the attraction. The trains are located near the former location of Flashback. |
| Ninja | 1988 | Arrow Dynamics | The world's fastest suspended roller coaster. Swinging coaches suspended from an overhead track whip around steeply banked turns and curves in and out of the treetops. |
| Orient Express | 1971 | Intamin AG/Kornenberg Shipbuilding Co. | This cable car ride was known from 1971-1988 as Funicular. |
| Percy's Railway (roller coaster) | 1971 | Bradley & Kaye | Small steel coaster designed specifically for young children. |
| Revolution | 1976 | Anton Schwarzkopf | First modern day roller coaster to feature a 360-degree loop. |
| The Riddler's Revenge | 1998 | B&M | World's tallest, fastest and longest stand-up roller coaster takes riders upside-down six times on 4,370-feet of steel track. |
| Roaring Rapids | 1981 | Intamin AG | An Intamin oval river rafting rapids ride. |
| Sandblasters | 1971 | Reverchon | Classic bumper cars in an enclosed building. |
| Scrambler | 2003 | Big Eli Bridge, Co | The park's former old Scrambler was damaged from an uprooted tree. This Scrambler was relocated from Six Flags Over Texas. |
| Scream! | 2003 | B&M | Floorless coaches riding above the rails traverse seven inversions on 3,985-feet of track. |
| Sky Tower | 1971 | Intamin AG | A 38 story observation tower overlooking the entire park. In 2008, a museum was added to the top of the tower showcasing memorabilia from the park's history. |
| Swashbuckler | 1983 | Chance | This Chance Yo-Yo was opened in 1983. It stands on the Galaxy's former site. |
| Superman: The Escape | 1997 | Intamin AG | First amusement park attraction to attain speeds of 100 mph. |
| Tatsu | 2006 | B&M | The world's tallest, fastest and longest flying roller coaster, with a suspended-track orientation featuring vehicles that recline passengers with their backs against the track. |
| Thrill Shot | 2001 | S&S Power | A Sky Slingshot with three towers. The ride requires an extra fee. |
| Tidal Wave | 1989 | Intamin AG | This Shoot-the-Chutes ride was built on the Grand Prix's old site. |
| Viper | 1990 | Arrow Dynamics | Giant seven-inversion steel roller coaster featuring the world's highest 360-degree loop. |
| X² | 2002 (renovated for the 2008 season) | Arrow Dynamics | The world's first fourth Dimensional roller coaster, where riders pitch forwards and backwards in seats that lie on a separate axis from the track. |
| Yosemite Sam Sierra Falls | 1993 | Intamin AG | A twin waterslide with tubes; known from 1993-1999 as Sierra Falls. |
| Ride | Year Opened | Year Closed | Manufacturer | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 99 Steam Train | 1971 | 1981 | unknown | The Train ride to the troll country. |
| Billy the Squid | 1971 | 1973 | Meisho | Polyp Ride. In 1973 this Polyp ride had a machine problem and was removed. The Jolly Monster was built on its site. |
| Circus Wheel | 1971 | 1999 | Chance | Chance Trabant with Roman theming. It spun in a clockwise direction and tilted at the same time. The ride was removed and Jolly Roger (Tilt-A-Whirl) was moved onto its site. |
| Circus Wheel | 1981 | 2008 | Sellner Manufacturing | This Sellner Tilt-A-Whirl was known in the past under the names Fiesta Dance 1981-1981; Baile de las Flores 1982-1988 and Jolly Roger 1988-1999. The Tilt-A-Whirl is removed to make room for 3-Point Challenge basketball game. |
| Condor | 1988 | 1989 | Huss | This Huss Condor was open for two years before being removed. It was removed to make room for Viper. |
| Crazy Barrels | 1971 | 1989 | Intamin AG | This Intamin Drunken Barrels was formerly located at a county fair. The Barrels were removed, but the platforms are still there behind the basketball game near the Metro station. |
| Dragon | 1974 | 1981 | Arrow Dynanamics | This transportation cable car from the upper level of the mountain down to the lower level of the mountain. The ride was removed and Ninja was built in 1988. The Dragon's track, wall, and station are still visible under Ninja. |
| Eagle's Flight El Dorado Side | 1971 | 1981 | Intamin AG | This Intamin AG aerial sky-way ride took passengers from the upper part of the mountain to the lower land on the north of the mountain. The station was next to El Bumpo's area. |
| Eagle's Flight Galaxy Side | 1971 | 1994 | Intamin AG | A second aerial sky-way ride from the top of the mountain to the lower land in the County Fair area. |
| El-Bumpo | 1971 | 1979 | Arrow Dynamics | Gas-powered bumper boats located on the pond. |
| Flashback | 1992 | 2003 | Intamin AG | One-of-a-kind roller coaster featuring a stacked design and numerous steep rolling track dives. It was SBNO since 2003, but was removed early in the 2008 season and sold as scrap. |
| Freefall | 1982 | 2008 | Intamin AG | An Intamin 1st-generation Freefall. The ride was standing but not operating from 2005 to 2006; however, it was scrapped for the 2008 season. |
| Galaxy | 1971 | 1979 | Intamin AG | An Intamin Double Ferris Wheel with cable pulley that looked like a V-shaped beam. The ride was removed and was located where Buccaneer and Swashbuckler are now sitting. |
| Grand Centennial Excursion Railroad | 1975 | 1985 | unknown | A big steam train that took passengers around. Located north of the main mountain. |
| Granny Gran Prix | 1971 | 2007 | D. H. Morgan | This track-guided car ride was known as Chevron Gran Prix (Gas Powered) from 1971-1986. A new turnpike (electric-powered) was opened for three years before being moved in 1988 to Bugs Bunny World. The old guided track was demolished to make room for Tidal Wave. In December 2007 it was demolished to make room for Thomas Town's opening in 2008. |
| Jolly Monster | 1973 | 1981 | Eyerly | A standard Eyerly Monster ride which replaced Billy the Squid. This thrill ride was at the Pirate's Cove near Colossus, Buccaneer, and Swashbuckler. The ride was removed and its site sat empty for 7 years before the Tilt-A-Whirl was moved there. |
| Magic Pagoda | 1974 | 1984 | Unknown | A walk-thru attraction located on Samurai Summit. It featured a talking buddha, a walk through a miniature version of chinatown and various other small scale items of interest with a Chinese Theme. |
| Mountain Express | 1973 | 1982 | Schwarzkopf | Wildcat coaster located near where Flashback stood. Relocated to Magic Landing as Wildcat and then to Bosque Magico as Montana Rusa, according to the Roller Coaster DataBase. |
| Psyclone | 1991 | 2006 | Dinn Corporation | A wood tracked roller coaster patterned after the Cyclone at Astroland park in Brooklyn, New York. It was torn down for the 2007 season, and piles of wood remained at the site for many days after the destruction. |
| Reactor | 1977 | 1993 | Schwarzkopf | A Schwarzkopf Enterprise, known from 1977-1987 as Enterprise, was renamed Reactor in 1987. This thrill ride was removed at the end of the 1993 season to make room for Batman: The Ride. |
| Sarajevo Bobsleds | 1984 | 1986 | Intamin AG | Bobsled coaster named the 1984 Olympics. Removed due to the Six Flags ride rotation program and replaced with Shockwave. It was moved to Six Flags Over Texas and opened as Avalanche, but was later renamed and rethemed as La Vibora to better match the Spain section of the park. |
| Scrambler | 1973 | 2003 | Big Eli Bridge, Co | This scrambler had a lot of damage from an uprooted tree and was scrapped; however, Six Flags Magic Mountain received another scrambler from Six Flags Over Texas. |
| Shockwave | 1986 | 1988 | Intamin AG | A Steel Standup looping roller coaster. it was removed in 1989 and relocated to Six Flags Great Adventure due to the ride rotation program. |
| Sierra Twist | 1973 | 2008 | Schwarzkopf | A Schwarzkopf Bayern Kurve ride. It was a high-speed bobsled ride with a circular track. The ride was removed due to aging parts and high maintenance costs. |
| Spin Out | 1971 | 2008 | Chance | A Chance Rotor known from 1971-1972 as Bottoms Up. |
| Tumble Drum | 1974 | 1980 | unknown | This walk-through barrel roll was located near the Electric Rainbow (now Grinder Gearworks). |
| Z-Force | 1987 | 1993 | Intamin AG | An Intamin Looping Starship/Space Shuttle themed as an Air Force fighter plane. The ride was removed at the end of the season in 1993 to make room for Batman: The Ride. |