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Disney Cruise Line has pulled back the curtain on Toy Story Place aboard the new Disney Adventure in Singapore, revealing a vibrant pool deck that turns the ship’s upper levels into something resembling a floating toy box and setting the stage for what could be one of the most playful cruise experiences yet for families in Asia.

A Floating Toy Box at Sea
Perched high on the upper decks of Disney Adventure, Toy Story Place reimagines the traditional cruise pool deck as an immersive Pixar playground. Oversized décor inspired by Woody, Buzz Lightyear and the film’s beloved three-eyed aliens towers above the water, giving guests the sense of having been shrunk down into Andy’s toy collection. Bold primary colors dominate the space, from bright red slide flumes to lime green railings and checkerboard tiling, reinforcing the feeling of stepping directly into the movies.
At the heart of the new zone is a large family pool framed by tiered seating and clusters of loungers, designed to keep parents close to the action without sacrificing relaxation. Multiple whirlpools ring the area, offering calmer pockets where adults can soak while still watching children dart between splash zones and slides. For Disney, the layout represents a clear attempt to blend spectacle and practicality, anticipating the needs of multigenerational groups drawn to the line’s first Asia-based ship.
Disney Adventure, homeported year-round in Singapore, was conceived as a resort at sea tailored specifically to regional cruising habits. Toy Story Place reflects that strategy, concentrating a high volume of activities, water features and snack options into a single contiguous deck so that families can spend long stretches of time there without having to shuttle back and forth across the ship.
Slides, Splash Zones and Big-Screen Moments
Key to the appeal of Toy Story Place are its water attractions, led by Woody and Jessie’s Wild Slides, a pair of twisting flumes rendered in the duo’s signature cowboy hues. Children and adults can race each other down the bright red and yellow slides into a shallow splashdown area animated by geysers and spray features. For younger cruisers and cautious parents, a dedicated splash pad with low fountains and gentle jets delivers a less intimidating way to cool off while still feeling part of the action.
Elsewhere on the deck, a Flying Saucer splash zone nods to the franchise’s alien characters, with UFO-like structures that tip and dump water at unpredictable intervals. That sense of surprise is central to the design language here, with hidden sprayers and pop-up effects that encourage repeat play. The variety of depths and intensities means different age groups can carve out spaces that feel tailored to them, a consideration that will matter on the ship’s short, activity-packed itineraries from Singapore.
Presiding over the area is a jumbo movie screen, positioned to be visible from much of the deck and flanked by casual lounge seating. At scheduled times, Toy Story films and Disney shorts are expected to anchor family-friendly screenings, transforming the space into an open-air cinema at sea. Between showings, the screen doubles as an entertainment hub for interactive games and character-led moments, further blurring the line between pool deck and theme park plaza.
Pixar-Themed Dining and All-Day Energy
To sustain the all-day energy of Toy Story Place, Disney Adventure has clustered quick-service dining around the deck, with venues themed to familiar elements from the films. Pizza Planet, modeled after the arcade restaurant that first appears in the original Toy Story, serves slices and other grab-and-go favorites steps from the pool. Nearby, a whimsically named frozen beverage stand keeps guests supplied with soft-serve and icy drinks in classic flavors aimed squarely at families spending hot afternoons outdoors.
The convenience factor is deliberate. By minimizing the distance between water play, seating and refreshments, the company is betting that Toy Story Place will become a natural gathering point throughout the day, rather than a brief stop between other scheduled activities. Parents can linger over snacks while children shuttle between the pool and splash pad, and extended families can regroup in shaded seating zones without needing to retreat indoors.
Subtle design choices support that vision. Shade structures echo building blocks and game pieces, while railings and dividers are low and open to maintain sightlines across the deck. The result is a space that feels busy but not chaotic, layered with visual references for Pixar fans that do not overwhelm first-time visitors unfamiliar with the franchise.
Positioning Disney Adventure in Asia’s Cruise Market
The unveiling of Toy Story Place comes as Disney Adventure prepares for its inaugural season sailing short itineraries from Singapore, a key milestone for Disney Cruise Line’s expansion into Asia. With capacity for thousands of guests and a slate of themed zones that also includes Marvel Landing, San Fransokyo Street and Wayfinder Bay, the ship is being marketed as a theme-park-like experience at sea tailored to regional tastes.
Within that mix, Toy Story Place is poised to be one of the most visible calling cards for family travelers. The Toy Story franchise enjoys broad recognition across generations in Southeast Asia, and the deck’s bright visual identity makes it an obvious focal point in marketing imagery. For guests who may be new to cruising but familiar with Disney’s films and parks, the space functions as a highly legible promise of what the onboard experience will feel like: colorful, kinetic and child-forward without excluding adults.
Industry observers note that the design also marks a shift from traditional cruise pool decks that tend to separate thrill slides from quieter family zones. By weaving multiple experiences into a single Toy Story narrative, Disney Adventure appears intent on offering a self-contained destination where guests could feasibly spend an entire sea day without running out of things to do.
A Playful Blueprint for Future Family Cruises
As Disney Adventure readies for its first voyages, Toy Story Place is emerging as a kind of blueprint for how cruise lines might reimagine outdoor family spaces in the years ahead. Rather than layering generic waterslides onto an otherwise conventional deck, Disney has opted for holistic storytelling, using characters and environments to guide everything from the color of the tiles to the shape of the shade canopies.
For families booking one of the ship’s three and four night sailings, the effect is likely to be immediate. Children disembarking in Singapore may remember Toy Story Place less as a pool deck and more as a floating playland where they could slide, splash and watch movies late into the tropical evening. Parents, meanwhile, may appreciate that beneath the whimsical theming lies a carefully considered layout that keeps everyone close, fed and entertained without constant planning.
Whether Toy Story Place ultimately becomes the most playful cruise experience at sea will depend on how guests respond once the ship begins regular operations. For now, the newly revealed deck underscores Disney’s broader ambition in Asia: to deliver a cruise product where recognizable stories and richly detailed spaces, starting with a colorful Toy Story toy box on the top decks, do as much work as the itinerary itself in luring travelers aboard.