Tag Archives: Forest Adventure Okuhita

Attack on Titan: Become a Scout at Hita’s Forest Park

If you’ve ever watched the Survey Corps go screaming through the canopy on ODM gear and thought “I want to do that,” there’s a forest in Kyushu that has been waiting for you. Forest Adventure Okuhita — tucked deep in the hills of Hita, Oita — runs a limited-time Attack on Titan collaboration that turns its zipline obstacle course into a Scout Regiment training run. Cloak on, blade in hand, the only thing missing is the Titans.

Visitors in Survey Corps cloaks at Forest Adventure Okuhita's Attack on Titan collaboration

Why Attack on Titan, and why Hita?

This isn’t a random anime tie-in. Attack on Titan creator Hajime Isayama is from Hita, and the town has leaned into being the spiritual home of Shingeki no Kyojin — there’s even a bronze statue trail of Eren, Mikasa and Armin nearby. So when the official Forest Adventure Okuhita park recreates the “Forest of Giant Trees” arc, it’s doing it on the franchise’s home turf. The course frames your safety briefing as Survey Corps enrollment, then sends you out on a mission inspired by the Female Titan capture operation.

So what does “role-playing as a Scout” actually involve?

The base attraction is a proper high-ropes adventure course: 35 activities spread across four sites, including swaying suspension bridges, a single-plank bridge that won’t stop wobbling once you start, and a Tarzan swing that flings you off a treetop platform onto a net. The headline thrill is the ziplines — four of them, with two stretching over 150m across deep valleys, and the longest runs around 180m at roughly 30km/h. The whole circuit takes about 1.5 to 2 hours.

Zipline through the cedar forest at Forest Adventure Okuhita

That’s the part that does the heavy lifting for the fantasy: gliding between cedar trunks on a harness is about as close as a theme attraction can get to the feeling of ODM gear without the imminent threat of being eaten.

The Attack on Titan magic comes from the add-on collaboration option, which has run at roughly ¥1,500 per person on top of admission. It kits you out with:

  • “Wings of Freedom” original non-slip gloves
  • A rental Survey Corps “blade” prop to carry through the course
  • A special completion certificate carved from Hita cedar — your proof you survived recruitment

Travel creators have captured the vibe well. In a widely shared Instagram reel, food-and-travel account @japanomnom framed the experience simply: “POV: It’s your first day in the Survey Corps.” During special collaboration runs, guests can even don Survey Corps cloaks for the photo spots dotted along the trail.

“POV: It’s your first day in the Survey Corps” — via @japanomnom on Instagram

Watch it in action

We Got the Ultimate Attack on Titan Experience — via OniGiri on YouTube

The practical stuff: price, height limits and getting there

Standard admission runs ¥3,800 per person for adults and children, dropping to ¥3,500 each for groups of eight or more, with the collaboration option layered on top. To take on the course you’ll need to be at least 140cm tall or 10 years old, and under the 110kg weight limit. Kids 17 and under need an adult along (one adult can supervise up to three children), while high-schoolers can go solo with ground-level supervision.

Survey Corps themed obstacle course at Forest Adventure Okuhita

The park sits in Nakatsue, Hita City, near the old Taio Gold Mine — punch “Taio Gold Mine” into your navigation. It’s roughly a 1.5–2 hour drive from Fukuoka, so a rental car is basically essential. Bookings, including the Attack on Titan option, go through the park’s official reservation site.

One important caveat: the Attack on Titan collaboration is a recurring limited-time event, not a permanent fixture. It has returned across multiple seasons (2021, 2023 and 2024 among them) and the themed option has been listed again heading into 2026, but the exact dates shift each run. Check the official booking page or the Hita City Tourism Association for the current window before you plan around it — the base adventure course, however, runs year-round.

Worth building a trip around

Kyushu is an easy, underrated add-on to a Japan itinerary: fly into Fukuoka, and Hita is a doable day trip — the same region as Yufuin and Beppu’s onsens, if you want to soak away the muscle ache afterwards. For an Attack on Titan fan, slotting in a morning where you actually strap into a harness and play Scout beats another merch run, and it’s hands-down one of the closest real-life brushes you’ll get with the world of Shingeki no Kyojin.

For more trips and tie-ins worth your leave days, browse our community features and guides.