And at 245-feet, including an underground tunnel, it will be the tallest dive coaster.

Still interested in riding it?

Are you mad?

OK, then you can look forward to having your legs dangle as you ride in one of three floorless trains.

The trains are built stadium-style, with three rows of eight seats so everyone will get an amazing view of that spectacular drop, Peacock said.

The coaster will also take riders through some “crazy flips and twists,” she said.

“It will be breathtaking,” she said.

Construction began in the off-season in late 2017 and it will be ready for riders next April.

The coaster will be located in Wonderland’s Frontier Canada, an area of the park 37 years in the making.

It was originally planned to be one of five themed sections supposed to have been developed for Wonderland’s first season in 1981, Peacock said.

The vision never came to fruition at the time, she said.

Yukon Striker will join rides Lumberjack, Flying Canoes, Mighty Canadian Mindbuster, Soaring Timbers, Timberwolf Falls and White Water Canyon in the area designed to represent the Klondike Gold Rush of the late 1890s.

“We’re bringing it back now, because we pride ourselves on being Canada’s premier amusement park. So, we feel it’s important to tie in our Canadian identity, where we can,” Peacock said.

“The Klondike Gold Rush is a great adventure story, and just as it was a great idea for a themed area back in 1981, we feel it still is today.”

Wonderland no long discloses the cost of its projects but Leviathan cost $28 million U.S. in 2012, Peacock said.

Yukon Striker won’t be Wonderland’s only new attraction next year.

Come late November and December, WinterFest will transform the park into a winter wonderland.

Guests will be dazzled by Snowflake Lake for ice skating, singers and dancers performing every night, a 70-foot Christmas tree with more than 40,000 sparkling ornaments, hands-on family activities, holiday food favourites like turkey and peppermint fudge and more, Peacock said.