Four rides, one ticket, instant Prater fun. In Vienna’s Prater, the Prater Super Ticket strings together big energy classics like Tagada’s disco carousel with newer thrills like VR on a spooky track, all for a special price. I especially like how the mix gives you something for different moods in one go, without needing to plan a whole day of separate tickets.
My second favorite part is the sheer range: Magical Rotor pushes real speed up to 82 km/h, while the VR Clown experience turns a long 150-meter route into a tech-forward scare. The only drawback I’d flag is archery: one ride option can feel more like a game with sound effects than a hands-on “shoot for real” moment, so if you want that classic shooting action, you might feel underwhelmed.
In This Review
- Key highlights worth knowing
- The Prater Super Ticket is the easy-value way to hit four attractions
- How one pass becomes four separate ride experiences
- Tagada: Vienna’s cult carousel with disco energy since the late 1970s
- The Clown VR track: spooky fun powered by vrisch tech
- Magical Rotor: the 82 km/h adrenaline ride above Vienna
- Archery in the Prater: Robin Hood-style target shooting, with a catch
- Price and value: what about $11 gets you in the Prater
- Best way to plan your day: anchor, then fill in
- Who should book this (and who might not love it)
- Should you book the Prater Super Ticket?
- FAQ
- How many attractions are included in the Prater Super Ticket?
- What does the ticket validity mean?
- Where do I go to start?
- Who can use the ticket?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
- Is payment required immediately?
Key highlights worth knowing

- Four attractions, one ride each at a special price, so you’re not stuck paying again after you’re already having fun
- Tagada’s iconic carousel has been a Prater staple since the late 1970s, with disco-style beats and high-energy moves
- VR Clown with vrisch partnership uses modern tech to turn a 150-meter track into spooky entertainment
- Magical Rotor up to 82 km/h makes this the most adrenaline-heavy stop on your ticket
- Archery is Robin Hood-style, but it’s also more playful than action-focused, based on how the experience can come across
The Prater Super Ticket is the easy-value way to hit four attractions

If you want a simple Prater plan, this ticket is built for that. You get access to four different rides and pay one combined price, which matters because amusement parks can turn into a budget puzzle fast when you’re buying separately.
The best part for me is the pacing. You’re not locked into one theme or one intensity level. Tagada is the crowd-pleaser, the Clown brings tech and spooky fun, Magical Rotor leans hard into adrenaline, and archery adds a more casual, throw-in-a-game vibe.
One more practical win: the ticket is valid for 7 days. That flexibility is useful if you’re bouncing between sights in Vienna and don’t want to burn your one perfect afternoon on a set time slot.
A few more Vienna tours and experiences worth a look
How one pass becomes four separate ride experiences

This isn’t a guided “tour” in the traditional sense. It’s a bundle that lets you take one ride on each attraction included in the ticket.
Here’s how it typically works once you’re there: you start at the Magischer Rotor ticket office at Prater 41 (1020 Vienna). Then, when you scan your ticket at an attraction counter, you receive a paper ticket for the other rides. One of the biggest time-savers is doing this smoothly at your first stop so you don’t have to chase paperwork later.
Also, since the ticket is valid for 7 days and the attractions have starting times you can check, plan like this: pick at least one “anchor” ride (for many people it’s Magical Rotor) and then fill in the rest around it. That keeps the day from feeling like a sprint.
Tagada: Vienna’s cult carousel with disco energy since the late 1970s

Tagada is the classic reason many people make time for the Prater at all. It’s an iconic carousel-style ride that has been spinning and bouncing in Vienna since the late 1970s, so you’re not just buying a modern thrill. You’re stepping into a long-running Prater tradition.
What I like about Tagada from a visitor standpoint is the vibe. The ride is described as disco-beat powered with acrobatic dance moves, which means it leans into fun and showmanship, not just speed. It’s also one of the more “everyone can enjoy this” attractions on your pass, especially if your group has mixed tastes.
Practical mindset: Tagada feels like a social ride. Expect that people will talk and laugh through parts of it. If you’re hoping for a quiet, scenic experience, this isn’t that. But if you want big energy with a reputation in the park, Tagada delivers.
The Clown VR track: spooky fun powered by vrisch tech

The Clown is where the Prater Super Ticket shifts from classic carnival energy to something more modern and brainy. Instead of relying only on physical motion, this one uses virtual reality to turn the experience into a spooky, tech-driven ride.
The setup is described as an immersive VR track experience, with vrisch as the award-winning studio partner. You’re dealing with a 150-meter-long track, which matters because longer routes usually have more beats to build atmosphere and keep you from feeling like the ride is over too fast.
For you, the value here is variety. You’ll get the sensation of a theme park scare without needing to chase separate high-tech attractions around Vienna. And because VR rides often feel different from one another, this stop is a good way to break up the adrenaline peaks from Magical Rotor.
One thing to keep in mind: some content is shown in its original language. If your group includes kids or adults who prefer everything in plain English, you might want to mentally prepare for that and focus on the visuals and atmosphere rather than plot details.
Magical Rotor: the 82 km/h adrenaline ride above Vienna
If your goal is a real thrill, this is the stop. The Magical Rotor spins you through airy heights, and it’s rated for centrifugal force fans. The ride description puts speeds up to 82 kilometers per hour, which is the kind of number you don’t see on “light” amusement rides.
From an expectations point of view, Magical Rotor is the ride you plan around. It’s the one that tends to set the tone for your visit. If you’re the kind of person who wants the most intense moment first (or last), build your day so it’s where you want it.
There’s also something satisfying about how this ticket handles it. You’re not forced to choose between thrills and everything else—you get the rotor experience and then still have three more attractions to smooth out the intensity curve afterward.
Archery in the Prater: Robin Hood-style target shooting, with a catch

Archery on this ticket is Robin Hood-themed: shoot for the target and try to hit something satisfying. That’s a fun premise, especially if you have teenagers or adults who like games that feel a little competitive.
Now, here’s the balanced note I’d give you before you get your hopes too high: one review mentioned the archery felt more childlike, with no physical balls involved and instead sounds being used as the feedback. I can’t say that will be your exact experience, but it’s a strong warning sign if you want the classic feel of hands-on shooting.
So how should you treat this ride? As a quick, playful break. If you’re using the Super Ticket to cover four attractions and you’re okay with archery being more of a light game than a hardcore challenge, it fits the lineup well. If you’re traveling with someone who only wants genuinely physical, skill-based action, consider whether this one is really your priority.
Price and value: what about $11 gets you in the Prater

The posted price is about $11 per person, for one ride each on four attractions. That’s the core value of the Prater Super Ticket: it reduces decision fatigue and keeps costs predictable once you commit.
To judge value, think about what you’d likely spend if you bought separate tickets. Even without comparing exact individual prices, bundling matters because you’re paying once for variety. You avoid the moment where you realize one ride already costs enough that you should have picked just one “must-do.”
Also, this ticket covers both classic and modern experiences. Tagada gives you a long-running carousel tradition. The Clown brings VR and a spooky track length that feels purpose-built. Magical Rotor supplies true speed. Archery rounds it out with a lower-stakes activity.
In other words, you’re paying for a full sample platter of the Prater, not one single attraction that might not match your group’s mood.
Best way to plan your day: anchor, then fill in

Since your ticket is valid for 7 days and ride starting times may vary, I’d plan like you’re building a schedule, not surviving one.
A simple approach:
- Pick your anchor first: for most people that’s Magical Rotor because it’s the biggest thrill
- Do Tagada when you want fun: it’s perfect as a lighter-energy counterpoint
- Place the Clown VR where you’re ready for spooky tech: it breaks up the physical intensity
- Slot archery as a breather: treat it like a quick game rather than your main event
You’ll also have a smoother time if you start at the Magischer Rotor ticket office at Prater 41 so you can get your paper ticket coverage set up early. Then you won’t be stuck repeating steps later when you’re trying to switch attractions.
If you’re traveling with family, this ticket can work well because it includes different types of fun, but keep the limits in mind. The ticket is recommended for ages 12 and up, and it’s not suitable for people under 130 cm.
Who should book this (and who might not love it)

This Super Ticket is a strong fit if you:
- want to cover four Prater attractions without buying separate tickets
- have a group with different thrill comfort levels and want variety in one place
- like the idea of mixing classic amusement with VR and a major adrenaline ride
- want a flexible plan because the ticket is valid for 7 days
It may be less ideal if you:
- are traveling with kids under 12 or anyone under 130 cm (height rules apply)
- mainly care about one “serious” skill game, since archery can feel more playful than action-focused
- strongly prefer fully English content, because some Clown VR content can be shown in the original language
Should you book the Prater Super Ticket?
If your priority is value plus variety in Vienna’s Prater, I’d book it. For one combined price, you get a classic crowd magnet (Tagada), a tech-backed spooky ride (The Clown VR), a true high-speed adrenaline option (Magical Rotor up to 82 km/h), and a casual extra activity (archery).
I’d make the booking decision with one simple checklist: do you want at least one thrill, do you’re okay with tech-based spooky entertainment, and are you fine treating archery as a light game rather than the highlight?
If yes, this is exactly the kind of ticket that saves money, saves planning time, and leaves you with a full set of Prater memories.
FAQ
How many attractions are included in the Prater Super Ticket?
The ticket includes four attractions, and you get one ride on each: Tagada, The Clown (VR), Magical Rotor, and Archery.
What does the ticket validity mean?
Your Prater Super Ticket is valid for 7 days. You can check availability to see starting times for the attractions.
Where do I go to start?
The meeting point is the Magischer Rotor ticket office at Prater 41, 1020 Vienna, Austria.
Who can use the ticket?
It’s recommended for ages 12 and up and is not suitable for people under 130 cm (4 ft 3 in).
Can I cancel and get a refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is payment required immediately?
You can reserve now and pay later, which keeps your plans flexible.




























