Josh D’Amaro. That really is the short answer. But the longer answer is actually pretty interesting and says a lot about where the parks may be heading next.
If you missed the news, it all came from a report by Len Testa of TouringPlans. He said the original plans for the Villains Land at Magic Kingdom had been scrapped and that Walt Disney Imagineering was now being told to come back with something bigger and bolder for the land. He also wondered whether this might be a “new players, new game” situation tied to Josh D’Amaro becoming the next CEO of The Walt Disney Company.
Personally, I struggle to see another explanation because the timing is just too perfect. With D’Amaro about to take over the company, the reception to Villains Land becomes his first real legacy project whether he wants it to be or not. A massive expansion like that is not just another addition, it becomes a statement about what the next era of Disney Parks, and the company as a whole, looks like. That matters a lot more to a new leader than to someone who already has decades of success behind them.

If Villains Land had opened under Bob Iger and ended up being fine but not amazing, it probably would not have changed how history remembers him. Iger already has a legacy full of major wins and only a handful of stumbles. One lukewarm land would not rewrite his story. The same cannot be said for Josh D’Amaro. If the public reaction to a major expansion is lukewarm, the pressure would build immediately and the board would start asking whether, just as they did after Bob Chapek, they might need to turn back to Bob Iger once again.
That is why I think the plans were paused. Not canceled, but reset. D’Amaro likely understands that the first major project associated with his leadership needs to feel undeniable. It cannot launch with mixed reactions, internet debates about missed potential, or a sense that the concept was compromised during development. The safest way to avoid that is to stop early and fix it before concrete gets poured.

I also think D’Amaro learned from Star Wars Galactic Starcruiser. The project was ambitious and creative but had obvious concerns from day one, especially the extremely high price point and niche appeal. When it closed after only eighteen months, it showed how damaging a high-profile misfire can be even when the idea itself is imaginative. Fans spotted the red flags early and they turned out to matter.
Because of that, this move feels less like panic and more like strategy. Instead of pushing forward and hoping the audience accepts it, Josh D’Amaro appears willing to take a short-term delay (and cost) in exchange for long term confidence. My immediate impression from this small announcement is that D’Amaro is trying to be tactical. He would rather start later or have the project cost a bit more than start wrong.
In other words, the scrapped plans may not be bad news at all. They might be the clearest signal yet that the next phase of Disney Parks wants to open big projects only when they are truly ready to wow people.



