Mimaland, located in Gombak, Selangor, was once the largest theme park in Malaysia before it closed in 1994 following a fatal landslide. The park featured a lake, water slides, and a dinosaur-themed garden, and attracted millions of visitors during its heyday in the 1970s and 1980s. Since its closure, the abandoned park has been reclaimed by the surrounding jungle, and its ruins have become one of Malaysia's most atmospheric haunted locations. Urban explorers who have ventured into the overgrown site report seeing figures among the rusting rides and crumbling buildings, hearing children's laughter from the empty playground, and experiencing the sensation of being followed through the dense vegetation. The abandoned water features — drained pools, collapsed slides, and the overgrown lake — create an especially eerie landscape. In Malay folk belief, abandoned places are quickly occupied by spirits, and a location where people once experienced joy but which was then struck by tragedy becomes particularly powerful. Mimaland's transformation from a place of family happiness to a haunted jungle ruin embodies the Malaysian concept of tempat angker — a supernaturally dangerous place that draws the curious and repels the wise.
