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Why Spaceship Earth Will Crush Figment’s D23 Dreams (And Why It Has To)

If you look at a satellite map of Walt Disney World right now, you will see an unprecedented amount of dirt being moved. As we head into the highly anticipated 2026 D23 Expo in Anaheim, three of the four Florida theme parks are actively transformed by massive construction walls as Disney pours billions of dollars into its next generation of immersive lands.

Cinderella castle and partners statue in disney world's magic kingdom
Credit: Disney

Over at the Magic Kingdom, ground has officially broken on both the sinister Villains Land and the massive Cars-themed expansion in Frontierland. At Disney’s Animal Kingdom, the demolition of Dinoland U.S.A. is well underway to make room for the Encanto and Indiana Jones attractions of Tropical Americas. Meanwhile, Disney’s Hollywood Studios is in the thick of building its first-ever suspended coaster for the new Monsters, Inc. land.

Because those massive, landscape-altering projects are already well underway, the spotlight for this year's D23 theme park panel inevitably shifts to the fourth gate: EPCOT.

With the successful, high-profile reopening of Test Track 3.0 in July 2025, and the center of the park finally free of construction walls thanks to the completed World Celebration gardens, EPCOT looks great on paper. However, two of the park’s most iconic, historic dark rides are desperately aging. Both Spaceship Earth and Journey Into Imagination with Figment are begging for a massive overhaul.

The Imagination Pavilion at EPCOT, featuring the entrance to Journey Into Imagination With Figment
Credit: Frank Phillips, Flickr

According to theme park insiders and industry predictions, EPCOT is likely to get only one major ride update announced at D23 this year. And unfortunately for hardcore Disney purists, it is not the ride they really want.

Here is why Disney is actively prioritizing a Spaceship Earth refurbishment over Figment, and why it makes complete logistical sense.

The Brutal Reality: Spaceship Earth Needs It More

If you ask any diehard EPCOT fan which ride needs to be completely gutted and rebuilt from the ground up, the answer is almost universally Journey Into Imagination with Figment. The current iteration of the ride is widely considered a massive thematic downgrade from the legendary 1983 original. Fans have spent over two decades begging Imagineering to bring back the Dreamfinder and restore the Imagination pavilion to its former glory.

EPCOT's Spaceship Earth with Mickey Mouse and friends topiaries at Christmas time
Credit: Kevin Baird, Flickr

But fans are likely going to be disappointed when the D23 Parks Panel kicks off. Industry analysts strongly predict that the spotlight will instead fall on the giant golf ball at the front of the park.

Disney is expected to announce a massive, multi-year reimagining of Spaceship Earth officially—and from a purely logistical standpoint, it has to happen now.

Dusting Off the 2019 Blueprint

We already know Disney wants to update Spaceship Earth because they technically already announced it. Back at the 2019 D23 Expo, Disney formally revealed “Spaceship Earth: Our Shared Story.” The park's grand icon was slated for a massive refurbishment, including brand-new show scenes, an entirely new musical score, updated narration, and a dynamic “Story Light” to guide guests through the history of human communication.

a Disney family strolls through EPCOT with Spaceship Earth in the background. EPCOT Light Lounge
Credit: Disney

That project was ultimately delayed indefinitely and effectively killed by the 2020 park closures. Disney was forced to slash its capital expenditure budgets, and Spaceship Earth was left to operate in its current, aging state. Announcing a revived, perhaps modified version of this project at the 2026 D23 Expo allows Disney to finally finish what they started without reinventing the wheel conceptually.

The Reliability Crisis

Beyond the outdated thematic elements, Spaceship Earth is suffering from severe mechanical fatigue. The ride system is ancient. While Disney has performed a few short “duct tape” refurbishments over the last couple of years to keep the omnimovers rolling, routine maintenance can only do so much. The attraction is experiencing increased downtime, and the infamous descent backward in the dark feels more like a budget cut than a grand finale.

figment ride stop - journey into imagination, epcot
Credit: D23

Spaceship Earth is the park's thesis statement and its undisputed visual icon. Having a high-capacity attraction with near-perfect uptime at the very front of the park is absolutely vital for EPCOT's crowd flow. Disney simply cannot afford to have its flagship ride constantly breaking down while thousands of guests pour through the front gates. Fixing Spaceship Earth isn't just about upgrading the animatronics; it is an urgent operational necessity.

The Budget Barrier

Disney Imagineering is currently leaning heavily into a strategy of smart reinvestment for Walt Disney World. With billions of dollars already actively flowing into building Villains Land, Tropical Americas, and the Monsters, Inc. coaster, there is simply not enough capital remaining to greenlight a massive, ground-up overhaul of the Imagination Pavilion right now.

concept art for Encanto ride in Animal Kingdom's Tropical Americas land
Credit: Disney

Instead, Imagineering is focusing its remaining resources on essential flagship updates. We saw this exact strategy executed successfully with the transformation of Splash Mountain into Tiana's Bayou Adventure and, most recently, with the incredibly popular Test Track 3.0 update. Spaceship Earth perfectly fits this strategy, providing a highly marketable “new” experience within an existing footprint.

While a Figment reboot is universally desired, prepare yourselves for the reality of theme park budgets and logistics. When the executive team takes the stage this August, the biggest news for EPCOT will almost certainly be the announcement of a thank-you to the Phoenicians.

Rick Lye

Rick is an avid Disney fan. He first went to Disney World in 1986 with his parents and has been hooked ever since. Rick is married to another Disney fan and is in the process of turning his two children into fans as well. When he is not creating new Disney adventures, he loves to watch the New York Yankees and hang out with his dog, Buster. In the fall, you will catch him cheering for his beloved NY Giants.

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