Disney Cascade of Lights: Everything to know about the 379-drone water show in Paris


Disneyland Paris has unveiled what might be the most technically ambitious nighttime spectacular the company has ever attempted. It’s called Disney Cascade of Lights, and it’s a 16-minute show combining 379 aerial and aquatic drones with water screens, fountains, projections and pyrotechnics. All of it takes place on a 3-hectare lake.

The show officially launched March 29, 2026 at Disney Adventure World, which is a completely overhauled version of the space formerly known as Walt Disney Studios Park. It sits across from Disneyland Paris as its sister park. And as it turns out, Disneyland Paris has been no stranger to impressive drone shows, including the Disney’s Electrical Sky Parade, which I saw with my own eyes back in 2024.

I was thoroughly impressed by the scale and storytelling of Disney’s Electrical Sky Parade. And after reading through Disney’s technical breakdown of the show ahead of launch and getting on the phone with Dronisos, I’m convinced this is the most ambitious drone show we’ve seen yet.

(Photo of the Disney Cascade of Lights nighttime show at Disneyland Paris courtesy of Dronisos)

Watch the full show here in a video posted to YouTube by Laughing Place:

What makes Disney Cascade of Lights different from other Disney drone shows

Disney has run drone shows before, including Disney D-Light, Avengers: Power the Night and Disney’s Electrical Sky Parade. All of these shows used aerial drones that flew quite high in the sky (up to 120 meters in the air). They also flew well behind their stage — Sleeping Beauty Castle — keeping them safely distant from audiences and weather complications.

Disney has run drone shows before, including Disney D-Light, Avengers: Power the Night and Disney’s Electrical Sky Parade. All of these shows used aerial drones that flew quite high in the sky (up to 120 meters in the air). They also flew well behind their stage — Sleeping Beauty Castle — keeping them safely distant from audiences and weather complications.

Disney has run drone shows before, including Disney D-Light, Avengers: Power the Night and Disney’s Electrical Sky Parade. All of these shows used aerial drones that flew quite high in the sky (up to 120 meters in the air). They also flew well behind their stage — Sleeping Beauty Castle — keeping them safely distant from audiences and weather complications.

Here’s Spalding explaining the technical approach in a video posted to the Theme Park Insider YouTube channel:

The technical setup behind Disney Cascade of Lights

Every night, the show requires moving a massive floating structure into position on the lake — a 14m x 14m central platform connected to four barges arranged in an almost circular formation.

Here’s what sits on that structure:

  • Central barge: Launch and landing platform for 279 aerial drones that take off, perform the show, and return to land autonomously.
  • Four surrounding barges: Each carries an 18m x 9m water screen for projections, plus additional pyrotechnics.
  • Fountains, lighting systems and projectors are integrated throughout.

The drones themselves were custom-developed in partnership with Dronisos, which is a French drone light show company that has done past Disney drone shows, including a record-breaking drone show featuring a massive Mickey Mouse back in 2024. For Disney Cascade of Lights, Dronisos created two completely new types of drones:

  1. Aerial drones engineered to be more resistant to wind and rain — critical not just for outdoor operation in European weather but also for flights over massive water screens. These drones can fly in winds up to 36 kph and have 30 minutes of flight time.
  2. Aquatic drones (nicknamed “ducks” by the production team) that operate directly on the water surface, creating lighting effects and choreographed movements across the lake itself.

We’ve all seen the drones that fly overhead many times before, but the aquatic drones are a genuinely new category here. Disney is deploying surface drones that move across the water, creating dynamic light patterns, synchronized movements, and visual effects at water level. Combined with the aerial drones above, this creates a three-dimensional canvas where drones in the sky and on the water’s surface — coupled with water screens — all work together.

Spalding described the water as “a mirror that multiplies all our light sources.” The aquatic drones light up and move across the lake surface, creating dynamic patterns. Low-angled lights ring the lake edges. Fountains provide their own light sources. Pyrotechnic effects layer on top. And the aerial drones create formations overhead.

(Photo of the Disney Cascade of Lights nighttime show at Disneyland Paris courtesy of Dronisos)

How Dronisos built the robotic system behind the show

What Dronisos delivered for Disney Cascade of Lights goes well beyond a drone fleet. The company describes it as a complete robotic system: aerial and aquatic platforms coordinated through proprietary software, all managed from a single unified command interface. It’s the first time a nighttime show has featured a multi-platform robotic fleet of this kind — aerial drones, aquatic surface vehicles, pyrotechnics — all programmed, secured, and monitored through one centralized system.

“One of the defining aspects of Dronisos is our focus on orchestrating motion across multiple vectors,” Jeremy Pancoast, Vice President of US Business Development for Dronisos said in an interview with The Drone Girl. “While many companies focus only on aerial drones, our platform allows us to choreograph movement across air, water, and land, expanding the canvas for storytelling and helping elevate the industry standard for drone-based entertainment.”

The aquatic drones are formally classified as USVs, or Unmanned Surface Vehicles, and they’re equipped with both lighting and pyrotechnics. The custom hulls were developed in collaboration with French firm Odas Solutions.

Dronisos developed the aquatic platform and its associated production and simulation workflows through xLabs, its internal laboratory focused specifically on robotic solutions for theme parks. The company has been the official technology partner for Disneyland Paris since 2022.

“Dronisos understands our creative needs as we push forward and continue to innovate and push the limits of our imagination,” Spalding said. “They are great partners helping us make the impossible possible.”

(Photo of the Disney Cascade of Lights nighttime show at Disneyland Paris courtesy of Dronisos)

The 3D pre-visualization workflow — and the nightly workflow

So how did Disney choreograph a show that involved coordinating 279 aerial drones, 100 aquatic surface drones, water fountains, projections, pyrotechnics, and lighting across a 3-hectare lake?

According to Spalding, the entire show was previewed in 3D using a detailed digital model of the park. Each technical team — aerial drones, aquatic drones, pyrotechnics, lighting, water effects — developed their own choreography plan within that shared 3D environment. This let them visualize, plan, and adjust down to the millimeter so that every element would integrate perfectly when performed live.

And speaking of live performances, 24 technicians run the show each night. That’s more than twice the number required for Disney Dreams or Disney Illuminations at Disneyland Park. It’s a signal of just how complex this production is.

The entire structure is moved into position each night by fully electric pusher boats, operated by specially trained barge operators who maneuver the components from a backstage marina. The 360-degree approach also meant carefully placing over 240 floodlights and light points around the lake, plus a sound system designed to work across the entire 3-hectare Adventure Bay area.

What about environmental considerations?

Disney is positioning this as an environmentally conscious production, touting feature such as:

  • Fully electric power supply for the boats (reduces carbon footprint vs. diesel)
  • Lake filtration system using fish species as part of the ecosystem
  • Residue-free materials in fireworks and pyrotechnics
  • 360-degree viewing design that maximizes audience access without requiring infrastructure expansion

The show itself: Inspiration as a character

(Photo of the Disney Cascade of Lights nighttime show at Disneyland Paris courtesy of Dronisos)

The 16-minute show is built around the concept of Inspiration as a narrative character — similar to how Peter Pan’s shadow functioned in Disney Dreams. Inspiration connects the audience to featured characters including Mulan, Moana, Hercules, Judy Hopps from Zootopia, the Avengers, and Carl Fredricksen from Up.

Director Susan Plyer emphasized that each character embodies a specific emotion, such as honor, duty, courage, commitment. She said the emotions were selected to resonate across European audiences.

The score was composed by Mark Hammond and recorded at Abbey Road Studios in London with a 90-piece orchestra. There’s also an original song, “We Can Be Heroes,” written specifically for the show.

Character visuals were designed and color-calibrated specifically for projection onto water curtains, which is a very different technical challenge than projecting onto castle facades or solid surfaces.

How to watch Disney Cascade of Lights

The show is now running nightly at Disney Adventure World with no end date announced. The parks are located in Marne-la-Vallée, France, about 32 kilometers east of Paris city center.

Besides the two theme parks, the Disneyland Paris Resort consists of seven Disney-owned hotels, two convention centers, a golf course, an arena, and a shopping, dining and entertainment complex. 

You’ll need to purchase a ticket to get into Disney Adventure World. Tickets start as low as $75 per adult depending on the day. Park admission includes the ability to watch the show — though you may want to line up early as it’s not necessarily a guarantee of a viewing position.

Reserved seating now available

And what if you DO want to reserve your seat for Disney Cascade of Lights? Disney is selling reserved viewing areas for €24 (about $30) per person.

The show runs nightly at Disney Adventure World alongside the park’s grand reopening and the debut of the World of Frozen area, which includes the Frozen Ever After attraction, an Anna and Elsa meet-and-greet inside Arendelle Castle, a boat show, and — perhaps most impressively — a self-walking “living” animatronic Olaf.

(Photo courtesy of Disneyland Paris)

My take on Disney Cascade of Lights

Disney has the budget and engineering resources to attempt things most drone show operators can’t — custom-designed drones for specific weather resistance, 3D pre-visualization workflows, 160-tonne floating infrastructure moved nightly, and integration across multiple technical disciplines: drones, water, pyro, projection, audio. Dronisos delivered not just a fleet but a full robotic operating system to run all of it from one interface.

The addition of aquatic surface drones is what makes this genuinely new territory. Most drone shows are purely aerial, but Disney and Dronisos essentially created a second drone fleet that operates on an entirely different plane — literally on the water surface — capable of lighting effects, synchronized movements, and effects that complement what’s happening overhead. As Pancoast confirmed to me, those ideas are already informing Dronisos’ broader platform, which suggests water-based drone choreography isn’t going to stay a Paris-only innovation for long.

If you’re planning to be in Paris, this is worth seeing — ideally from multiple viewing angles around the lake to appreciate the 360-degree design and to see how the aerial and aquatic drones work together. And if you’re working in drone shows or entertainment production, pay close attention to how Disney is integrating aquatic and aerial drones with traditional show elements. This looks like a proof-of-concept that will influence how theme parks and live entertainment venues think about nighttime spectaculars going forward.

Flying to Paris? Here are my best cheap travel tips

Search flights behind Charles de Gaulle

Paris is served by two major international airports — Charles de Gaulle (CDG) and Orly (ORY). Search both to compare prices. CDG is the larger hub to the northeast of the city, handling most long-haul and major carrier flights, while Orly to the south tends to attract more budget and regional carriers. Tools like Google Flights make this effortless: just type “Paris” as your destination and it will automatically pull results across both airports from virtually every airline, letting you compare at a glance.

Use Google Flights to find the cheapest dates

Flexibility is one of the most powerful tools in a fare hunter’s arsenal, and Google Flights is built for exactly that. Use the price calendar or “Explore” grid view to scan fares across an entire month and identify the cheapest travel windows — sometimes shifting your departure by just a day or two can save a significant chunk of money. Setting up price alerts for your target route is also a smart move, since Paris fares fluctuate often and a good deal can appear and disappear quickly.

Don’t poo poo budget carriers

If you’re departing from the West Coast or the New York area, French Bee is worth a serious look. The carrier operates transatlantic flights from San Francisco (SFO) and Newark (EWR) directly into Orly, often at prices that undercut legacy airlines by a wide margin. The trade-off is that fares are stripped down — checked bags, seat selection, and meals all cost extra — so make sure to price out your total cost before booking. But when the numbers work out, French Bee can be one of the most affordable ways to get to Paris from the U.S.

Travel during the shoulder seasons

Timing your trip strategically can be just as impactful as finding the right airline. Paris in peak summer — particularly July and August — commands premium fares and crowded attractions. Consider traveling in the shoulder seasons instead: late April through early June offers pleasant weather and lower prices, as does September and October. Not only will you likely pay less for your flight, but hotels and tourist sites (whether that’s Disney or beyond!) tend to be more manageable outside of peak travel windows, making the overall trip more enjoyable.

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