Scream Parks does it again!

Welcome to Scream Parks Presents Begending, the 3rd park that is Bible themed in the Scream Parks Theme Park family.

In 1919, Afterlife Park opened to the public, in San Antonio, Texas. It opened with one coaster, and many other rides, and was a success. After many years of operation, adding flat rides every couple of years, and coasters every 10 or so, the park became a powerhouse in the Texan market. In 1978, Rollercoaster Town Inc. bought the park, and the land around it for future expansion. The park had already expanding onto the upper plateau, which was the animal half of the park, and used the bottom half for parking. In 1982, They moved the parking lot across the street, added a Shuttle coaster to the bottom half, and moved many of the flat rides down near the shuttle. In 1989, They added a semi hyper coaster, but with stand up trains to the bottom half of the park. It proved to be a big success, and with that, the park started on one of the biggest expansion of a park in world history. In 1995, RCTNI planned for the park to be changed into a mega themed Bible based park. Unlike its sister parks, RCTN came up with the idea themselves. Turning the upper half into "Heaven", the middle to "Earth" and the bottom to "Hell." They had restrictions on the amount of construction they could do on the middle part though because endangered wildflowers grew here. The park decided to then build more on the other plateaus. The animals were then moved to other animal parks in the chain. RCTNI then fueled most of its money into the three Bible parks, which in the end, made them go bankrupt. In 2000, Scream Parks bought RCTNI, and promised to keep with the themes of the parks, and finish what RCTNI had started, but after that would do whatever is best for the chain of 16 parks.




I would like to thank everyone who helped on Begending, from SA, to Sean, and just everybody. Hope you like the park, and get ready for SfoG 2001 and Disney Texas: Ports Of Call, a park made by me and SACoasterFreak.
