The Grand Hall of the Disney Destiny is its most striking and prominent gathering space, a living theater where heroes and villains from across the Disney universe take center stage and interact with guests in thrilling ways. Inspired by the rich lore, distinctive iconography and vibrant palette of Marvel Studios’ “Black Panther” films — including a stunning statue of the Black Panther himself at the heart of the space — this kinetic environment comes to life with immersive shows and interactive programming. (Disney)
Disney Cruise Line
Disney Cruise Line’s newest ship, Disney Destiny, has been christened and is ready to set sail with guests on its maiden voyage on November 20, 2025. This is the third in Disney’s Wish-class, joining Disney Wish and Disney Treasure. But, as the new vessel sails around the Caribbean, Disney Cruise Line is looking to the future of its brand and how it can shake up the cruise business.
“Our ambition in this space [is] delivering more ships to more destinations [with] more stories,” Josh D’Amaro, Chairman of Disney Experiences, told me on a phone interview just days before Destiny’s christening. “Just in the past four years, we’ve launched three ships. We’ve now got our second home port and a new island.”
But Disney Destiny stands out in the crowd of Disney’s current fleet of seven ships. The ship features plenty of firsts for the cruise line, including the first heroes and villains theme on any Disney Cruise Line vessel, the first Marvel stern character and Grand Hall character statues (Spider-Man and Black Panther, respectively), the first Lion King-themed dining experience, the first Dr. Strange-themed lounge, and more.
“I think the Destiny is going to be a great example of how powerful these cruise ships are,” says D’Amaro. In a recent earnings call, Disney’s Chief Financial Officer, Hugh Johnston, stated Disney Cruise Line sailings are nearly half booked for 2026, and newer ships, like Disney Destiny, have a higher ratio of bookings than Disney’s older ships (Disney Magic, Disney Wonder, Disney Dream, Disney Fantasy). For Disney, those bookings turn into quick profits. In fact, new cruise ships are usually profitable in the first quarter of operation.
The Disney Cruise Line Bubble
The Disney Destiny, a new addition to the expanding Disney Cruise Line fleet, will embark on its maiden voyage from Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on Nov. 20, 2025, followed by an inaugural season of four- and five-night cruises to The Bahamas and Western Caribbean. The ship draws on the legacies of Disney’s larger-than-life heroes and villains to forge one-of-a-kind vacation experiences for families. (Disney)
Disney Cruise Line
While most Disney fans think of the “Disney Bubble,” they think of Walt Disney World. This “bubble” idea means that you leave the day-to-day world behind and allow yourself to be fully immersed in a carefully curated environment that Disney controls. It’s the notion that you never have to leave the world of “magic” that Disney creates in its parks, but D’Amaro says Disney Cruise Line is also a bubble concept.
“Something really important to Disney Experiences [is] making sure that when guests come into our parks or on our ships, that they are fully immersed in story,” he says. “We want them leaving their daily lives behind, and we want them to feel our stories, and meet our characters, and be lost in the magic of a Disney experience on a Disney cruise ship.”
Whether it’s onboard or onshore, Disney can curate moments that allow guests to be fully taken over by a story. For instance, on Disney Destiny, guests will have the chance to interact with characters in new ways. During these character “meet-and-plays,” guests may have the opportunity to teach Marvel’s anti-hero Loki about the joys of a Disney Cruise, play a game of chance with Dr. Facilier from The Princess and the Frog, or take part in a fashion show with Cruella de Vil from 101 Dalmatians.
The Evolution of the Wish Class of Ships
“Disney Hercules” is a brand-new, Broadway-style retelling of the Walt Disney Animation Studios film developed exclusively for the Disney Destiny. Embodying the ship’s theme of “heroes and villains,” the show features jaw-dropping puppetry to represent the mythological behemoths that Hercules must defeat to fulfill his hero’s journey, such as the multi-headed Hydra monster. (Disney)
Disney Cruise Line
Anyone who has sailed on one of the Wish-class ships knows that they are completely different from Disney Cruise Line’s original four vessels. The Disney Wish, Disney Treasure, and now Disney Destiny are filled with technology to enhance a vacation, and newer stories are highlighted in more immersive spaces than ever before. This is especially true of the Haunted Mansion Parlor, which debuted on the Disney Treasure and is also present on Disney Destiny. The lounge feels like it should be located somewhere in the popular Disney Parks attraction rather than on a cruise ship sailing to one of Disney’s island destinations.
Even then, each of the Wish-class ships feels distinctly different from one another. It seems Disney creatives have learned from each of the previous iterations of vessels in this class to make Destiny.
“Every time we build a new ship, we’re leveraging the learnings from the past and applying them forward. We’re using technology a lot more aggressively than we have in the past to create that immersion that we’re looking for, whether it’s on an attraction on our ships or in a show, or even in our dining experiences,” says D’Amaro.
One of the biggest marvels awaiting guests onboard is Disney Hercules, an all-new show coming exclusively to Disney Destiny. The show will be a modern retelling of the young boy turned Greek god as he goes from zero to hero. It will utilize larger-than-life puppets (including exoskeleton suits that performers can stand inside of), daring special effects, and a rousing score that’s sure to bring guests to their feet at the end of the show.
Looking to the Future of Disney Cruise Line and Beyond
03 September 2025, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Mukran: The lettering “Disney Adventure – Nassau” can be seen on the cruise ship “Disney Adventure”, which was built in the Wismar shipyard in the port of Mukran on the island of Rügen. After around seven years of construction, one of the world’s largest cruise ships starts its test voyages. The US shipping company Disney Cruise Line took over the ship from the insolvency estate and is having it built by the Meyer shipyard in Papenburg, Lower Saxony. The ship will be in service for the Disney Group in Southeast Asia from the end of 2025. Photo: Stefan Sauer/dpa (Photo by Stefan Sauer/picture alliance via Getty Images)
dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images
“We’ll have 13 ships by the time we get to 2031,” shares D’Amaro. And with each of those new ships comes higher demand from returning and potential cruisers. “We continue to invite new people into the cruise space. 40 percent of our cruisers come into the cruise space only because we’re there.”
Since bookings are in high demand, it should come as no surprise that Disney is building even more cruise ships. “We’ve got five more ships coming between 2027 and 2031,” says D’Amaro.
Next year, the Disney Adventure will be the first Disney Cruise Line ship to homeport in Asia, bringing Disney’s largest vessel to Singapore. Then in 2027, a fourth Wish-class ship will launch, followed by the three smaller, unnamed vessels. Disney Cruise Line will also build a ship in partnership with Oriental Land Co., which is scheduled to start sailing by early 2029.
Even beyond Disney Cruise Line, Disney Experiences, the segment within the Walt Disney Company that encompasses theme parks, cruise business, consumer products and more, is seeing a major boost. Over the next 10 years, Disney will nearly double capital expenditures to roughly $60 billion. Some of the major developments in the works are an all-new Frozen-themed land coming to Walt Disney Studios Park (to be renamed Disney Adventure World) at Disneyland Paris, a new Avatar experience at Disney California Adventure at the Disneyland Resort, and a villains-themed land coming to Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World.