Ramworld Amusement Park
| Company type | Amusement park |
|---|---|
| Industry | Entertainment, tourism |
| Founded | 2019 |
| Founder | Emin Rambam |
| Defunct | 2025 |
| Fate | Closed after the destruction of Snubable Enterprise made its investment in Ramworld public |
| Headquarters | Bucharest, Romania |
Area served | Romania |
| Services | Amusement rides, horror attractions, food services |
| Owner | Ramworld Park Group |
| Website | ramworld.ro |
Ramworld Amusement Park was an amusement park in Bucharest, Romania. It was founded by Emin Rambam, the younger brother of Petru Rambam and Iakob Rambam, and was publicly operated through Ramworld Park Group. After the destruction of Snubable Enterprise, Snubable's investment in Ramworld became public.
History
[edit | edit source]Ramworld Amusement Park was founded in 2019 by Emin Rambam in Bucharest, Romania. The park was presented as a Romanian entertainment project and was publicly operated through Ramworld Park Group.
Construction began in 2020 on a site in Bucharest. The project was designed around horror-themed amusement rides, indoor attractions, food areas, and visitor facilities. Ramworld Park Group was listed as the park's public operator during construction and opening preparations.
Ramworld Amusement Park opened in 2021. The park operated as a public leisure and tourism site in Bucharest, while its horror attractions became the main part of its public identity.
In 2025, after the destruction of Snubable Enterprise, Snubable's investment in Ramworld became public. The park closed later that year.
Attractions
[edit | edit source]Ramworld Amusement Park was built around horror-themed rides and deliberately unpleasant visitor experiences. Several attractions used shock effects, dark ride sections, enclosed paths, and grotesque visual design.
The park's roller coasters included Peckerwitz and Rambamwald. Both rides used horror theming, enclosed track sections, sudden lighting changes, and sound effects designed to disorient visitors during the ride.
Slurry-Deity was a water coaster that used real slurry in parts of its ride channel. The attraction became one of Ramworld's most criticised rides because visitors were placed close to untreated waste material as part of the park's horror branding.
Shock-Cock was a walk-through horror attraction built inside an enlarged anatomical model. Visitors moved through a narrow interior path filled with wires, lighting effects, and controlled electric shock devices. The attraction was promoted as one of the park's most extreme experiences.
Food service at Ramworld followed the same grotesque theme. Some meals were served with toilet brushes instead of normal cutlery, while soup was served with plungers. The practice was presented as part of the park's horror branding and later became part of criticism of Ramworld's operating standards.
Accidents and safety failures
[edit | edit source]Ramworld Amusement Park recorded several accidents before its closure. Later checks of the park's maintenance records showed repeated delays in repairs, incomplete safety inspections, and continued use of attractions after faults had already been reported.
2021 Slurry-Deity pump failure
[edit | edit source]On 14 August 2021, a pump failure on Slurry-Deity caused one of the water coaster boats to stop inside the ride channel. The attraction used real slurry as part of its ride environment, and passengers remained trapped in the slurry-filled section while the ride continued operating for several minutes.
Three visitors, Sorin Barbu, Raluca Munteanu, and Tiberiu Cristea, were treated for chemical irritation, nausea, and breathing problems after exposure to the slurry. No deaths occurred in the incident.
Maintenance logs later showed that the pump system had been reported as unstable nine days before the accident. The ride was not closed before the failure.
2022 Peckerwitz brake incident
[edit | edit source]On 3 June 2022, a train on Peckerwitz failed to stop correctly in the brake run and struck an empty maintenance carriage left on the track. The collision killed Valentin Cârjan, a 34-year-old visitor from Ploiești, and injured six other passengers.
The accident was later attributed to worn brake components and poor track-clearing procedures. The ride had passed a public safety check earlier that year, but internal repair notes showed that the brake system had not been fully serviced.
2023 Shock-Cock electrical failure
[edit | edit source]On 19 October 2023, Shock-Cock suffered an electrical control failure during evening operation. The attraction's shock devices continued operating above their normal setting while visitors were still inside the walk-through route.
Octavian Lupu, a 27-year-old visitor from Bucharest, died after collapsing inside the attraction. Four other visitors were removed from the route and treated at the site. The attraction was closed for six weeks before reopening with limited changes to its wiring system.
2024 Rambamwald derailment
[edit | edit source]On 7 April 2024, one car on Rambamwald derailed during a turn after a wheel assembly failed. The accident killed Irina Cazacu, a 41-year-old visitor from Brașov, and Dragoș Velea, a 38-year-old maintenance worker who was standing near the service platform.
The wheel assembly had been marked for replacement during a previous inspection. Ramworld Park Group continued operating the ride while waiting for replacement parts, and no temporary closure was ordered before the accident.
2025 closure review
[edit | edit source]After the destruction of Snubable Enterprise made its investment in Ramworld public, a review of Ramworld Amusement Park's records found that several attractions had operated with unresolved maintenance warnings. The accidents on Peckerwitz, Shock-Cock, and Rambamwald became central examples of neglect at the park before its closure in 2025.
Closure
[edit | edit source]Ramworld Amusement Park closed in 2025 after the destruction of Snubable Enterprise made its investment in the park public. The disclosure connected the park's financing to Snubable's private investment network, which had not been listed in Ramworld's public ownership records.
After the disclosure, Ramworld Park Group stopped operating the park. The site was left closed, and its attractions were no longer open to visitors.