I highly, highly doubt SFA would be involved in a deal like this. If a park operator were to pick up SFA, it would have to be one with INCREDIBLY deep pockets, not just to buy the park (as the land is incredibly valuable) but also to spin the park back up. There's a huge difference between buying an aging, even slightly distressed-yet-still profitable and currently operational park like Six Flags St. Louis and buying an equivalent park that has already officially shutdown like Six Flags America.
SFA's staff is gone, SFA's pass holders are gone, there have been no preparations for a 2026 season, many attractions deemed not-relocatable have likely been neglected over the winter thus far, the park was put in a sort of "zombie mode" throughout much of 2025 in which it deferred a ton of maintenance, drew down their stockpiles to zero, etc.
IF the offers have been unexpectedly weak for the property and IF any park operators were even at the table to begin with and IF one of those park operators somehow ends up victorious at the end of this, it's my expectation that it will be a significant existing name (LEGO, Universal, Disney, Herschend, etc) or a new entrant backed by a TON of capital and likely IPs to push (Netflix, Paramount, etc). Basically I think the only way SFA is revived is by a company with deep pockets and a plan to heavily renovate the park. Trying to drag SFA back to life in its current state strikes me as a pretty doomed strategy, honestly.