Coaster Lover
Well-Known Member
- In the Parks
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Isn't there supposed to be a Groot and Rocket animatronic based on the concept art?Anyone know if there are animatronics in the pre-show?
Isn't there supposed to be a Groot and Rocket animatronic based on the concept art?Anyone know if there are animatronics in the pre-show?
Current word is no AAs anywhere in the attraction. Pre-show similar to Cali’s Spinners ride. Of course, this could be wrong.Anyone know if there are animatronics in the pre-show?
“One of”![]()
Get a sneak peek at new Guardians of the Galaxy ride coming to Disney World
The ride will feature the first reverse launch on a coaster in Disney history and it will be one of the longest enclosed coasters in the world.abc7ny.com
Disney has a long illustrious history of hyping up costly elements that either end up being cut before opening, or became significantly underutilized once their operational realities were fully understood. Off the top of my head, here are some examples from recent-ish years:
Of course this isn't to say that the coaster won't spin at all, or that its motions won't remain the same of years to come. However, Disney has a proven track record for spending huge sums of money on things that either never appear for paying guests, go out of commission shortly after opening without replacement, or are significantly scaled back. A quick walk through any Disney park will show countless items that were abandoned long ago, yet remain in place serving no particular purpose.
- Telescoping tower in World of Color intended to be used for Zurg and Chernabog show elements, constructed and tested but never used for public performances
- Hundreds of millions of dollars spent on the much-hyped Luigi's Flying Tires, which was closed within 3 years of opening due to lackluster performance, and was replaced with another forgettable B-ticket that also cost well over $100M to install
- DAK's parkwide after-dark push, including Pandora's bioluminescent elements, the night safari, and Rivers of Light, which has all be rendered mostly obsolete by reverting to park hours that close shortly after sundown for the majority of the year, since most guests have already left the park anyway, as the park struggles to command a full day's attention 20+ years after opening with its limited attraction roster
- Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge interactive elements that were one of the land's biggest selling points (and had gone through extensive playtesting in DL's Frontierland) were all cut prior to opening day
- Expensive Mission:Space centrifuges permanently disabled when it became tragically apparent that the attraction as originally designed was too intense for average park guests
- MK's New Fantasyland dragon, which had a massive viral marketing campaign, but only appeared one evening for a private press event
- And, of course, the yeti in Expedition: Everest, which has been stationary since shortly after the ride opened
I don't doubt that the new coaster will have the controlled rotations on opening day. But it remains to be seen whether that element is necessary for the attraction to succeed, and if it will remain unchanged for years to come. As Disney has proven many times, just because it's expensive doesn't mean it's essential.
Speaking of coasters you forgot a big one: the custom designed swinging cars on Seven Dwarfs Mine Train that don’t swing nearly as much as originally envisioned, and really don’t swing all that much.
Disney also didn’t develop the rotating technology. I’m almost certain F.L.Y. came in well under $100 million.
They’re called “annual financial reports”. Look for those divisions that generated a profit.lol iM curious where the 100s of millions of dollars for luigis flying tires comes from and then another 100million for the replacement came from
Then enlighten us.lol iM curious where the 100s of millions of dollars for luigis flying tires comes from and then another 100million for the replacement came from
I'm not surprised...Pixar Pier was $100 million and that was just for new paint jobs and to glue fiberglass Incredibles figures into tunnels.i cant imagine that terrible and thankfuly gone luigis tires ride cost 200+million dollars to build. Im just asking where that info is from? RSR cost 200+ million to build and that makes sense....but a small scoot around on air ride seems like it wouldnt cost nearly as much as RSR
RSR was well above 200 millionsi cant imagine that terrible and thankfuly gone luigis tires ride cost 200+million dollars to build. Im just asking where that info is from? RSR cost 200+ million to build and that makes sense....but a small scoot around on air ride seems like it wouldnt cost nearly as much as RSR
I saw it over numerous years on numerous attractions.Genuinely curious - how long did that last? I’ve never seen it work.
All of my extended family likes it. Is it RSR, no. - it’s not supposed to be.RSR was well above 200 millions
Numerous attractions?I saw it over numerous years on numerous attractions.
Responded to wrong comment - oops. Was responding about liking Luigi’s Rollickin RoadstersAll of my extended family likes it. Is it RSR, no. - it’s not supposed to be.
Several already listed above (just off the top of my head - It’s a small world, RnR, Star Tours, EE…). The fact it’s subtle is what makes it nice, I wouldn’t want it in your face, just blends in. It’s those small touches that are nice.Numerous attractions?
Don't forget the much-hyped 2.5-D for MMRR.
"A ride that would be ridiculed if it opened at Epic Universe for being a poor effort? Also sure."I already mentioned that, but I'm wrong, and everyone is sure that this ride will be amazing. This isn't like Gringotts. It rotates to see a screen when you are mostly stationary, and at least on flat track. This ride has gravity track, that is sloped, going by screens. Not much can be on those screens other than action. I do think the Tron analogy is probably right, and that is a very quick, blink (of look the other way) and you miss it, use of a screen.
As for the comment of this can't be Space Mountain 3.0 and a D ticket. Well, that depends on what you think an E ticket it. If an expensive ride is an E ticket, everything Disney does is E. If you think an E ticket is a state of the art ride (Indy, Spidey, Space Mountain in the 70s, Splash, Forbidden Journey, RotR, it's hard seeing how this ride will be an E. No animatronics, a coaster in a box with cars that rotate some, and a few screens and tunnel effects. I mean until proven otherwise, this seems to EXACTLY be Space Mountain 3.0. A crowd please at a park starving for big rides? Sure. A ride that would be ridiculed if it opened at Epic Universe for being a poor effort? Also sure.
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