Carnival Radiance launched as Carnival Victory in 2000. It was renamed Radiance in 2021 following an extensive makeover. Renovations included the addition of 115 staterooms, a water park, updating decor, and updating many of the ship’s food places and other venues. At double occupancy the ship holds 2984 guests with a maximum passenger capacity of 3400. Maximum capacity of a cruise ship is how many people they have lifeboat space for rather than the most they could stuff into the ship if all the staterooms held as many people as possible for each cabin. Crew numbers about 1100. The ship is 893 feet long and 116 feet wide which is significantly smaller than Carnival’s largest ship, the Jubilee, at 1130 feet long and holding over 6000 passengers. My first impression of Carnival Radiance was too many people for the amount of public space available. Considering the renovation added 115 staterooms, that’s a pretty good explanation since that reduced public space while adding more passengers.
The centerpiece of the ship is its atrium. At its lowest level on deck 3, a popular bar sits in the central space. It was generally filled with people all day long. The atrium extends all the way up the ship with a skylight at the top. Decks 4 and 5 have public spaces surrounding the atrium with a fancy stairway running from deck 3 to deck 5 within the atrium. Decks above that have an open area above the atrium with a view down to deck 3 and of the glass elevators running up one end.
The ship has a lot of different bars which is mainly what it has for public space, especially within the interior of the ship. The Red Frog Pub is pretty spacious and often hosts activities throughout the day. The smaller Piano Bar also occasionally hosts some activities. The third bar in the same area is the Alchemy Bar which is fairly small, but has seating by windows that is usually full of people whether the bar is open or not.
Space at the back of the ship on a deck of otherwise all public areas on deck 5 that would generally be some sort of lounge on most ships – and in fact is on the similarly laid out Splendor – is just more staterooms on this one. It feels like they are trying to stuff as many people as possible onboard, which they probably are, but then there aren’t enough places for all those people to go. Teenagers tended to hang out in the space between stairways as other than the arcade or kid’s club they had nowhere else to go inside of the ship.
Some of the hallways between spaces aren’t very wide either, particularly where people wait in line at Blue Iguana on the burrito side in an already too narrow walkway heading into the buffet between the Blue Iguana and its seating area. Even without the line of people waiting there’s barely enough room for scooters to pass through. Seating at the buffet can be hard to find during busy times even when adding all inside and outside tables anywhere near there including those on the next deck up. Besides the buffet and Blue Iguana, deck 9 (the Lido deck) is also home to Guy’s Burgers, Pizza, and Big Chicken. Guy’s Pig and Anchor barbecue sits on deck 10 above the pizza and chicken places. There’s also an upstairs Italian place on deck 10 inside above the buffet called Cucina del Capitano that is free at lunchtime, but costs extra at dinner. Other pay-extra eateries include the steakhouse, sushi, chef’s table and a seafood shack.
The main theater – called the Liquid Lounge – is nice, but small. Considering that part of the renovation included shrinking the theater to make room for more staterooms the fact that it is small is not surprising. The seats in the lower area are movable so they can rearrange them for different shows or remove them to use that space for other things. Having a flat floor there means that there is no drop from any seat to the one in front of it so sitting in the ones along the sides of the theater is a better choice for seeing shows since the ones in the balcony type area along the sides have a good drop from one row to the next. The back of the theater has a big bar.
We saw a show there where almost none of the floor seats were facing the stage, but they had a lot of extra things extended from the stage where much of the show took place. The lower seats were arranged around those. That show had a lot of singing and dancing and some drone lights. Drone lights in a cruise ship show used to be unique to Symphony of the Seas, but apparently they have gotten easier to program or just more popular because we were recently on a Princess ship that had drone lights as part of a show as well. Radiance had them going for quite awhile and in changing colors where sometimes they were all the same color and sometimes all different colors. Maybe drone lights are the new aerialists. Years ago we saw an aerialist on a Celebrity ship and they were the only ones with any so it was new and different and unique. A few years later practically every ship had at least one show with at least one aerialist. They’re still around, but getting scarcer now. It’s probably not as easy to expand the drone lights though and they haven’t done so nearly as quickly. They can’t fly on regular GPS on a moving ship so they have to be programmed to something internal. At a comedy show we saw later in that same theater all of the lower seats were arranged in rows facing the stage and there wasn’t any of the additional apparatus for the performers to spread out onto, just the regular stage.
The ship has 10 full decks and 3 partial ones. Only one of the full decks and two of the partial ones have no staterooms. Seven of them have at least some outside space, but there are very few deck chairs in the shade. There are a lot of deck chairs, just mostly out in the sun (or whatever the weather may be.) On the Serenity deck the one space that is under another deck where there is good shade is taken up by a bar. There are some shade structures in places, but they don’t fully shade anything.
The Lido deck has two pools and 4 hot tubs. There’s one additional hot tub on the adults only Serenity deck on deck 14, which is really deck 13 since deck numbering goes straight from 12 to 14, skipping 13 as is usual on American cruise ships. During our cruise hot tubs in the Lido deck pool area were best avoided as there was nearly always someone with a diaper baby in them even though that’s against the rules for any pool on all cruise ships for obvious reasons. The one on the Serenity deck was free from babies, but the water was not very warm. The others probably weren’t very warm either since normal hot tub temperature would be too hot for babies. They could have solved that problem by turning the heat up.
The thermal suite in the spa had a good number of the heated ceramic chairs, which were a different style than usual and not as ergonomic. It also had a sauna and steam room, but no pool or hot tub of any kind. The closest was the outside hot tub on the Serenity deck one deck up, which would have been nice if the water had been warmer.
Our cabin had a few things wrong with it like a drawer that didn’t close and a closet you had to fight the door to open. It was also the least magnetic ship we’ve been on, at least since we started bringing magnets. Even our super strong magnetic hooks couldn’t hold anything up on the cabin walls. Doors couldn’t hold magnetic decorations other than the strip around the door where only small ones fit. It was definitely not our favorite ship. More public spaces, shady deck chairs, hotter hot tubs, and a pool in the thermal suite would have improved it.
The dining room we were in was nice. It looked pretty new and did not sport the wild décor that Carnival ships of the Victory’s era generally had. Most likely it was completely redone when the ship had its makeover. On Carnival gluten free and vegan options are available on the dining room menu without having to order in advance like on most cruise lines. There’s a whole separate menu for them in the app if you scroll past the main menu and the wine menu. The paper menu in the dining room doesn’t show those options, but anyone without the app could ask the waiter about them.
Things to do onboard besides the pools and hot tubs include waterslides, mini-golf, a ropes course, basketball court, games, casino, and relaxing in deck chairs. Scheduled activities included trivia and other games, dance lessons, yoga, Pilates, and other gym stuff, theater and comedy shows, movies, scavenger hunts, and music in different venues around the ship. Thery had some lectures on jewelry and gym and beauty stuff, but those are intended to get people to buy things so don’t really count as entertainment. There’s a lot of things they do to try and get people to buy stuff. A lot of space in the daily Fun Times was taken up by stuff for sale rather than stuff to do while important things like the all-aboard time on sea days was not displayed anywhere obvious if at all in the Fun Times.
There are a few secret areas on the ship that very few passengers find. Decks 6, 7, 10, & 11, all had doors at the end of the front cabin hallways that went out onto open bow areas. There was a stairway between the bows on 6 & 7. There are lower bows too, but they were for crew only. Most people don’t know about it so you don’t often run into anyone else out there. Everybody knows about the outside promenade down either side of the ship on deck 3 which has some deck chairs, but the deck above also has an outside walkway on either side.
People go there to check in for muster stations, but most aren’t aware that passengers can go out there during the cruise too. At least they were allowed to during our cruise. Passengers are only allowed on the sides though. Crew can go farther back. It feels like you are somewhere you aren’t supposed to go, but any crew we ran into were friendly. On the Splendor which had the same feature passengers were not allowed in that area, but on the Radiance when it was open for people checking into their muster stations we asked. The crew guy said we could go there so we gave it a try. The few crew we ran into were kind of surprised to see passengers, but nobody said we couldn’t be there. Not even the officers.
Stairway art on the back stairs was sea creatures. Each level had something different. Various types of fish or on one it was seahorses. The middle stairs had water scenes. Beaches or islands or something with bodies of water. The front stairway was sunrises or sunsets over water scenes. All tasteful and nothing weird like we have seen in stairway art on some ships. The ship in general looked a lot more modern in the décor than what was typical of Carnival ships when it was built so it was likely all redone when it changed from Victory to Radiance. It used to seem like odd or ugly statues were a requirement on all cruise ships, but we have seen a lot less of them lately and did not notice any statues at all on this ship so either there weren’t any or they didn’t stand out enough to take note of them.
One of the elevators was closed for maintenance for a couple days. On deck 6 it had a barricade around it and there was a roll of cable on the floor within the barricade. Good that they are replacing it if it’s necessary, but a bit frightening that they need to when it had been open and running just the day before. Hopefully it was routine maintenance done long before there’s any danger rather than having something seriously wrong on the verge of failure. It worked fine after it got fixed.
Duck trading mailboxes are getting more popular on cruise ships. People put ducks in them and other people come by to trade their ducks for the ones in the mailboxes. Or at least that’s how it’s supposed to work. Some people just raid what’s there and don’t leave anything. We saw 8 duck mailboxes on this ship. Several of them looked like maybe the people had their own 3D printers and made ones similar to the little yellow ones people buy, but better. Sturdier and a bit bigger on one and a better design on the others. People have been hiding rubber ducks around cruise ships for years, but the duck mailboxes are fairly new. Most of them were small enough to fit on the little magnetic strip around cabin doors, but ours were too big. Mine had enough super strong magnets that it actually stayed on the wall, though it tended to slide down a bit when people opened it. On the next ship we went on with normal magnetic walls it never budged when people used it and in fact held so tightly it took a lot of effort to pry it off the wall. John’s didn’t have as many magnets as mine and had to be tied to a rail that ran along the wall on the Radiance, but has no problem sticking to the wall on other ships.
We had one tender port on this cruise. People who don’t have priority tender booked their tender tickets in the app, which meant they didn’t have to wait in a long line to get them. We had priority so we just had to go to the right place at the right time. Since we didn’t have to book ours through the app I don’t know how well the app reservations worked or how people who didn’t have the app got tickets. If it worked well it would definitely beat waiting in a long line. Cruise ship apps often have issues, though we didn’t have any problems with it on this cruise. The people next to us at dinner could never even get the menu to come up, though I think that was more the people than the app. Excursion tickets and info are also in the app rather than printed tickets, but you just need your key card to check in so excursion tickets aren’t actually necessary.








































































































































































