

Medieval Times uses stroboscopic and pyrotechnic effects. Persons with respiratory conditions, allergies, or asthma attend at their own risk. In addition, our cocktail servers will be making the rounds and are happy to deliver a variety of spirits from the bar that you request for an additional fee.Īllergy/Strobe Warning: Medieval Times is a live horse show in an enclosed arena. You receive your choice of fresh fruit or Italian ice for dessert.

Gluten-free meals available upon request include tomato bisque soup, hummus, carrot and celery sticks, as well as the main course of roasted chicken, sweet buttered corn and herb-basted potato. The vegetarian option includes all of these vegan dishes along with a side of warm pita bread. The vegan meal includes a generous serving of hummus with carrot and celery sticks, a main course featuring three-bean stew with fire-roasted tomato and brown rice, and a choice of fresh fruit or Italian ice for dessert. A vegetarian meal is available upon request. The menu at Medieval Times consists of garlic bread, tomato bisque soup, roasted chicken, sweet buttered corn, herb-basted potatoes, the dessert of the Castle, coffee, and two rounds of select beverages. The spectacle unfolds nightly inside a fully enclosed European-style castle. Lances splinter against shields of steel, broad swords spark, and a champion emerges, to the cheers of the enthusiastic crowd. While guests enjoy a hearty four-course medieval-style banquet (without silverware), six brave knights compete in games of skill astride magnificent Andalusian stallions. Medieval Times can be a really fun family day it is just up to you to decide when they're ready to go.Medieval Times is more than the nation's #1 and longest-running dinner attraction - it's a living link to the past where the glory, chivalry, and valor of old burst to life in authentic pageantry and thrilling tournament action.


So if your toddler gets worried or nervous you can reassure them that they'll be back later. All of the Knights come back out on their horses to wave goodbye. At the end of the show it is abundantly clear that everyone is OK. It is loud and there are periods of darkness. There are "bad guys" and fights that use swords and mallets and what not. There are elements that make this event potentially scary for some toddlers. Watching the hawk fly around and of course, the horses. My girls ate up the food and enjoyed the excitement of cheering for our Knight. So is Medieval Times toddler-friendly? I really have to say, you be the judge. After the jousting portion is over the Knights jump off their horses to use weaponry and the horses trot out of the arena, I had to explain to my toddler that the horses were fine and they would be back later. Though at one point she grew very concerned for the horses. This may be scary for some toddlers, mine didn't really seem to understand what was going on, she's not quite 3 so I think a lot of it went over her head. At one point one of the Knights wants to kill his combat advisory but the Queen intervenes. I don't believe anyone actually dies but they are certainly carted off with help as the other Knight celebrates. During the fighting scenarios the Knights fight to the *brink* of death.
