The ride
Siren's Curse is a steel roller coaster built by Vekoma on its Tilt Coaster platform at Cedar Point in Millennium Midway, Ohio, having opened to the public in 2025. After 1 season of operation it remains one of the defining attractions on the Cedar Point midway, drawing repeat riders who track every subtle change to its trains, restraints and station soundtrack.
On paper the ride is a serious thrill machine. It climbs 160 ft above the park before pitching forward into its first descent. Trains reach a top speed of 58.0 mph before the first turnaround, where the layout opens up into a sequence of lateral and vertical elements. In total the track stretches 2,966 ft, giving the experience a distinctly long-form feel rather than the punchy one-and-done character of many modern compact coasters. The layout includes 2 inversions, which is a notable count for any modern installation and a defining part of how the ride photographs from the queue. enthusiast trip-planning resources
Coasters from Vekoma have a recognizable signature in track shaping, train design and the way transitions are paced. Riders familiar with other Vekoma installations will pick up on the same DNA in Siren's Curse's layout, particularly through its station design and the sound profile of the running gear. As a Tilt Coaster, it sits within a recognizable family of attractions and benefits from years of refinement applied to similar installations elsewhere.
Plan to ride Siren's Curse early in the day or during the final hour before park close, when standby waits at Cedar Point typically drop. If sensitivity to inversions is a concern, request a back-row seat where the transitions feel smoother and the forces are distributed more evenly. Single-rider lines and early-entry ticketing programs, when available at Cedar Point, are usually the fastest ways to get repeat rides on a busy day. broader coaster community archives
In CoasterVault's ranking tables, Siren's Curse currently appears in our 136th position for fastest coasters, 69th position for tallest coasters, 12th position for longest tracks, 145th position for most inversions lists, reflecting where its core stats place it among operating coasters in the United States. These rankings move whenever a new installation opens, so the position should be read as a snapshot rather than a permanent record.