Especially when you consider that your odds of adjusting those park reservations last minute are not high.But you do have to plan....you have to plan what park you are in every day, you said it yourself
that IS planning
Especially when you consider that your odds of adjusting those park reservations last minute are not high.But you do have to plan....you have to plan what park you are in every day, you said it yourself
that IS planning
But you do have to plan....you have to plan what park you are in every day, you said it yourself
that IS planning
I personally would never pay for a universal express-like system; however, it’s a moot point because this is the very reason we don’t have Disney APs anymore and instead switched over to Universal.Relative to Universal's Express Pass, I did not love FP+. Though FP was better than the current fiasco, I would rather not plan anything. The beauty of Express Pass is I just ride what I want to ride whenever I want to ride it. One of the things I dislike about WDW is the need to be on a schedule all day. If you want any table service food at all, you pretty much have to pre-book it. That has been a dumb part of visiting WDW, because the buses and trains don't run on time, or frequently enough. To go from one end of WDW to the other via bus often takes 90 minutes. That is a huge chunk of my vacation time just to eat.
Then when we do arrive, we wait again to be seated. And we're paying over $50 for this option. If you actually factor time lost, it is probably well over $100 per person for a TS meal.
But if you don't buy the G+ upcharge, you wait 90 plus for each attraction. So that is even more crappy than not paying.
But it gets worse, because using G+ doesn't = getting on all the rides, it only = MAYBE getting on a handful of them. If I am paying to skip rides, make it simple: G+ = something like 4 passes that I can use whenever I choose.
The park restrictions are also an insult, because they aren't being used to give us easy access, they only restrict how early we can go between parks.
There is no reason, aside from cost reduction, that any of the parks should be closed before 10pm, with the exception of animal kingdom. Bottom line is that there is a bean counter somewhere that figured out that the money being generated in the evening is too low to justify the costs of having cast members staffed in the parks.Reduction of park hours and attraction downtime are huge factors not always considered
If a park is open 2 hours less than in the past and a ride is averaging 60mins of down time, that is 3 hours less availability for that ride than potentially in the past. Only magnified by all the people with LL for that down time now need to fit into the remaining open time further impacting standby
Plus with shorter hours it is harder to justify a mid-day break so more people physically in the park at times than in the past (assuming same total # of guests for that day)
I just checked and every park except MK is available for today for ticketed guests and everyday for the rest of June has at least some availability, a few days have all parks still availablePark reservations have been hard to get since February. I know because I've had to reschedule my trip twice and park reservations have always been a limiting factor. There is no slow/busy time anymore. DHS and MK have regularly been out of park reservations three weeks to a month in advance, so you do need to plan in adance.
yet is was easier to get a FP for FoP than it was fo CRT to eat at yet nothing has been done there lol....FP+ did work well for resort guests. I agree they need more attractions in each park. As has been mentioned Disney knows Genie+ isn't working. I know it has lots of issues but the main reason it doesn't work is too many people have it. They also know your average guest didn't like the amount of planning required. They went too far the other way. I'm hoping when they do fix Genie+ there is a middle ground.
I think it isn't so much what price point as much as WDW needs to first fix standby times. Attractions should not have 2 hour wait times, except very rarely like opening week of a new attraction. Long waits = frustration.I just wonder/what price point a true Express pass would have to be at to really work at WDW. At Universal it ranges from $100-300/day on top of your ticket. It would have to be at least that, probably starting at $200, to work
And at some point you may conflict with VIP tours
I wonder if something more like what they are doing in Paris where you can buy individual ride line skips or the bundle (I think of like 12) would be better
I work right next door to Epic Universe. I cannot wait for it to be open and switch my passes from Disney to Universal.I think it isn't so much what price point as much as WDW needs to first fix standby times. Attractions should not have 2 hour wait times, except very rarely like opening week of a new attraction. Long waits = frustration.
Alas, there is a solution in the works, it just isn't coming from Disney. A significant portion of parkgoers will happily abandon Disney's mess once they have a brand new park to explore. Pay hundreds for the G+ mess, or pay a similar amount to visit a new park? Huh!
Though that is assuming Universal doesn't make a mess of it. Universal botched the opening of Volcano Bay, so there's no guarantee things will go smoothly, but Disney is doing a great job of helping Universal these days.
totally agree especially now that park reservations are going nowhere ... why would you NOT want to be able to pre book rides at your OWN leisure from the comfort of your own home as opposed to waking up and trying to do it with 10's of thousands of people at once on vacation... people act like ALL vacations require NO planning... that is simply NOT the case ... some places for sure others definitely not and Disney is one of those places where planning is needed and honestly i still think the dining 180 days out (granted its 60 now) was the biggest of all issues but my window opens up in 2 weeks and they still have yet to post hours... im hopeful they will have some but doubt it..... yet somehow booking 3 rides at your convenience was an issue for some?!? I still dont buy that excuse.. they wanted to charge which is their right but they should have just kept the system in place and go from there instead of this disaster called Genie+I still have not heard ONE reason not to WANT to pre book........
Doesnt even need to be a good reason, just one reason
On most of those days MK and HS are not available. "At least one park being available" (usually Epcot, and sometimes AK) is not the same as having the flexibility to pick your park the way you did under the old system. Disney is using the park reservation system to force its guests to go where Disney wants, not where the guests want to go. They are sacrificing customer satisfaction for their own convenience. I'm hoping that this is still in large part due to labor shortages attributable to COVID, but if it's not, it's inexcusable.But to a much lesser degree. Big difference with picking what Park to do on a day that is relatively easy to book on your own time vs having to decide on 3 attractions for every day of you trip and getting up at 6am 30 or 60 days out to book that. Very different level of planning
Also, you don't *have* to even make a park reservation - just checked and there is at least one park available to ticketed guests today and every day this week. So you could show up with zero plans and still do something (not guaranteed of course)
I think it isn't so much what price point as much as WDW needs to first fix standby times. Attractions should not have 2 hour wait times, except very rarely like opening week of a new attraction. Long waits = frustration.
Alas, there is a solution in the works, it just isn't coming from Disney. A significant portion of parkgoers will happily abandon Disney's mess once they have a brand new park to explore. Pay hundreds for the G+ mess, or pay a similar amount to visit a new park? Huh!
Though that is assuming Universal doesn't make a mess of it. Universal botched the opening of Volcano Bay, so there's no guarantee things will go smoothly, but Disney is doing a great job of helping Universal these days.
Assuming you want to go to EPCOT for 3 of those days.Also, you don't *have* to even make a park reservation - just checked and there is at least one park available to ticketed guests today and every day this week. So you could show up with zero plans and still do something (not guaranteed of course)
In the scenario you describe (Genie+, Park Pass, and ADR, i.e., the current scenario) there is no mechanism for "pre-booking rides." Before 7:00 am, that is. So your question doesn't make sense. Unless, that is, you are really asking one of the two following questions. (I will answer each.)Give me one good reason...actually, give me one reason, doesnt even have to be good......keep in mind that its knowing paid FP, park pass and advanced dining are here to stay
Not often but it does happen. You can bet its on a night when we would like to go after work.Assuming you want to go to EPCOT for 3 of those days.
Does EPCOT ever run out of park passes?
It's inexcusable either way.I'm hoping that this is still in large part due to labor shortages attributable to COVID, but if it's not, it's inexcusable.
It's inexcusable either way.
The labor shortage issue is of their own making.
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