Halloween every day? Universal Horror Unleashed opens in Las Vegas
Las Vegas β I turn a bend and see a figure in a cornfield. The gray sky is foreboding, a storm clearly on the horizon. When I take a step forward, Iβm hit with a gust of wind and fog. Suddenly, itβs no longer a silhouette in the haze but a scarecrow, shrouded in hay, lurching toward me.
Only I am not on a Midwestern farm, and there is no threat of severe weather. Iβm in a warehouse in Las Vegas, walking through a maze called βScarecrow: The Reaping.β I jump back and fixate my phoneβs camera on the creature, but that only encourages them to step closer. Iβm hurried out of the farmland and into a hall, where giant stalks now obscure my path.
Welcome to Universal Horror Unleashed, which aims to deliver year-round horrors and further expand theme park-like experiences beyond their hubs of Southern California and Central Florida. Horror Unleashed, opening Aug. 14, is an outgrowth of Universalβs popular fall event, Halloween Horror Nights, which has been running yearly at the companyβs Los Angeles park since 2006 and even longer at its larger Florida counterpart.
-
Share via
Like Halloween Horror Nights, there are maze-like haunted houses β four of them here themed to various properties such as βThe Texas Chainsaw Massacreβ and βThe Exorcist.β Their more permanent status allows for a greater production factor β think disappearing walls and more elaborate show scenes β and they are surrounded by brooding bars, a pop-up rock-inspired dance show and a host of original walk-around characters. βHey, sugar,β said a young woman as I near the warehouseβs main bar, a wraparound establishment themed to a large boiler. The actorβs face was scarred with blood, hinting at a backstory I didnβt have time β or perhaps the inclination β to explore.
Horror Unleashed is opening just on the cusp of when theme parks and immersive-focused live experiences are entering one of the busiest times of the year: Halloween. The holiday, of course, essentially starts earlier each year. This yearβs Halloween Horror Nights begins Sept. 4, while Halloween season at the Disneyland Resort launches Aug. 22. Horror shows and films are now successful year-round, with the likes of βSinnersβ and βThe Last of Usβ enrapturing audiences long before Oct. 31. Culture has now fully embraced the darker side of fairy tales.
A scene from the βTexas Chainsaw Massacreβ maze at Universal Horror Unleashed in Las Vegas.
Texas Chainsaw Massacre at the Universal Horror Unleashed.
A gruesome moment during the βTexas Chainsaw Massacreβ maze at Universal Horror Unleashed.
βYou can make every month horrific,β says Nate Stevenson, Horror Unleashedβs show director.
Thatβs been a goal of David Markland, co-founder of Long Beachβs Halloween-focused convention Midsummer Scream, which this year is set for the weekend of Aug. 15. When Midsummer Scream began in 2016, it attracted about 8,000 people, says Markland, but today commands audiences of around 50,000. βRapidly, over the past 10 or 15 years, Halloween has become a year-round fascination for people,β Markland says. βHalloween is a culture now. Halloween is a lifestyle. Itβs a part of peopleβs lives that they celebrate year-round.β
There will be challenges, a difficult tourism market among them, as visits to Las Vegas were down 11.3% in June 2025 versus a year earlier, according to data from the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. And then thereβs the question of whether audiences are ready for year-round haunts that extend beyond the fall Halloween season to winter, spring and summer. I entered Horror Unleashed for a media preview on an early August night when it was 105 degrees in the Las Vegas heat. Itβs also been tried before, albeit on a smaller scale. Las Vegas was once home to Eli Rothβs Goretorium, a year-round haunted house that leaned on torture-horror and shuttered after about a year in 2013.
But Universal creatives are undaunted.
Frankensteinβs monster comes alive during a Universal monsters maze at Universal Horror Unleashed.
More than a decade, of course, has passed, and Horror Unleashed is more diverse in its horror offerings. A maze themed to Universalβs classic creatures winds through a castle and catacombs with vintage-style horrors and a mid-show scene in which Frankensteinβs monster comes alive. Original tale βScarecrow: The Reaping,β which began at Universal Studios Florida, mixes in jump scares with more natural-seeming frights, such as the aforementioned simulated dust bowl.
TJ Mannarino, vice president of entertainment, art and design at Universal Orlando, points to cultural happenings outside of the theme parks in broadening the terror scene β the success of shows such as βThe Walking Deadβ and βAmerican Horror Story,β which found audiences outside of the Halloween season, as well as βStranger Things,β which he says opened up horror to a younger crowd. Theme parks are simply reflecting our modern culture, which is craving darker fantasies. Universal, for instance, recently opened an entire theme park land focused on its classic monsters at its new Epic Universe in Florida, and even Disney is getting in on the action, as a villains-focused land is in the works for Walt Disney Worldβs Magic Kingdom.
An anxiety-ridden actor in βThe Exorcist: Believerβ maze at Universal Horror Unleashed.
βWe think our audience really wants this,β says Mannarino, noting theme park attendance surveys were prodding the company to give horror a permanent home. And at Universalβs Orlando park, Halloween Horror Nights starts earlier, beginning in late August.
βJust a couple years ago, we started in August, and we were selling out August dates,β Stevenson says. βOn a micro level, weβre seeing that, boy, it doesnβt matter if you extend past the season or extend out before the season β people are coming. People want it.β
The central bar, themed to a boiler room, at Universal Horror Unleashed.
Universal is betting on it, as the company has already announced that a second Horror Unleashed venue will be heading to Chicago in 2027. Smaller, more regional theme park-like experiences are once again something of a trend, as Netflix has immersive venues planned for the Dallas and Philadelphia regions, and Universal is also bringing a kid-focused park to Frisco, Texas.
There are antecedents for what Universal is attempting. Disney, for instance, tried an indoor interactive theme park with DisneyQuest, for which a Chicago location was short-lived and a Florida outpost closed in 2017. Star Trek: The Experience, a mix of theme park-like simulations and interactive theater, operated for about a decade in Las Vegas before it shuttered in 2008.
βI know thereβs horror fans and Halloween fans who are always looking for something to do,β Markland says. βWhat [Universal is] doing is very ambitious and big, and so Iβm nervous along with them. Weβll see how it goes. Iβm sure people will go as soon as it opens and through the Halloween season, but after that, I donβt know. … Theyβve definitely invested in Halloween and horror fans. Theyβre all-in.β
Horror, says author Lisa Morton β who has written multiple books on the Oct. 31 holiday, including βTrick or Treat: A History of Halloweenβ β is thriving in part because today it is taken more seriously by cultural critics. The genre also has metaphorical qualities β the struggle, for instance, that is life, art and creativity in βSinnersβ or the underlying themes of PTSD that permeated the latest season of βThe Last of Us.β That makes it especially appealing, she says, for todayβs stressful times.
βI suspect thatβs part of the reason horror is booming right now,β Morton says. βEverything from climate change, that we seem to have no voice in, and our politics, that donβt seem to represent us. Many of us are filled with anxiety about the future. I think horror is the perfect genre to talk about that. When you add a layer of a metaphor to it, it becomes much easier to digest.β
To step into Horror Unleashed is to walk into a demented wonderland, a place that turns standard theme park warmth and joy upside down. Donβt expect fairy tale-like happy endings. The spaceβs centerpiece performance is twisted, a story centering on Jack the Clown and his female sidekick Chance, who have kidnapped two poor Las Vegas street performers and are forcing them to execute their acts to perfection to avoid murder. The deeper one analyzes it, the more sinister its class dynamics feel, even if itβs an excuse to showcase, say, street dancing and hula hoop acrobatics.
A circus show at Universal Horror Unleashed features various Las Vegas performers.
The space has an underlying narrative. Broadly speaking, the warehouse is said to have been a storage place for Universal Studiosβ early monster-focused horror films. That allows it to be littered with props, such as the throne-like chair near its entrance, and for nooks and crannies such as a βfilm vaultβ to be renamed a βkill vault.β Somehow β horror loves a good mystery β the space has come alive, and donβt be surprised to be greeted by a vampire or a costumed swampland figure that may or may not be related to the Creature from the Black Lagoon.
The goal, says Universal creatives, is to give Horror Unleashed a bit of an immersive theater feel, something that canβt really be done among the chaotic scare zones and fast-moving mazes of a Halloween Horror Nights event. But here, guests can linger with the actors and probe them to try to uncover the storyline that imbues the venue. One-to-one actor interaction has long been a goal of those in the theme park space but often a tough formula to crack, in part because cast members are costly and in part because of the difficulty to scale such experiences for thousands.
βAs weβve evolved this style of experience, we have given more and more control of the show to the actors,β says Mannarino on what separates Horror Unleashed from Halloween Horror Nights. βItβs less programmed. Itβs less technology. Iβve had conversations with tech magazines, and theyβll ask me what is the most critical piece, and Iβll say itβs the actors. … The lifeblood of our all stories β we can build all of this, but it doesnβt go without the actors.
βItβs what really drives this whole animal,β he adds.
A dark moment in βThe Exorcist: Believerβ maze at Universal Horror Unleashed.
It extends a bit to the mazes as well. Audiences should expect to spend about five to seven minutes in each of the four walk-through attractions, but unlike a Halloween Horror Nights event, where guests are rushed from room to room without stopping, in Las Vegas there will be one dedicated show scene per maze. Here, groups will be held to watch a mini-performance. In the βExorcistβ maze, for instance, that means witnessing a full exorcism, complete with special effects that will have walls give way to demonic specters. In the β70s-themed βTexas Chainsaw Massacreβ haunt, look out for a bloody scene designed to drench guests.
Universal Horror Unleashed
The mazes are intended to be semi-permanent. Stevenson says thereβs no immediate plans to swap them out in the near future but hints that Horror Unleashed will be an evolving venue and, if all goes according to plan, will look a bit different in a few years. Thus, he says the key differentiator between Horror Unleashed and Halloween Horror Nights is not necessarily the tech used in the mazes, but the extended time they can devote to unwrapping a story.
βWhen Universal builds a haunted house, the level of story that starts that out is enormous,β Stevenson says. βThereβs so much story. All of our partners need that because they base every little nuanced thing off of that story. Unfortunately, we donβt always have the chance to tell that story, and all our fans tell us they want to know more story.β
A sampling of food and drinks at Universal Horror Unleashed, including a bread dish with bourbon-laced cheese.
Tacos and a chainsaw-themed flatbread at Universal Horror Unleashed.
Story percolates throughout the venue. Flatbreads, for instance, are shaped like chainsaw blades. Desserts come on plates that are mini-shovels. Salad dressing is delivered in syringes. In the past, says Mannarino, no one wanted their food to be played with. ββDonβt do horrible things to my food!ββ he says in mock exaggeration. βBut now, people really love that.β
Little, it seems, is obscene, when every day can be Halloween.