Universal Epic Universe (South Expansion Complex) - Now Open!

Sir_Cliff

Well-Known Member
I have seen the exact opposite response. 🤷‍♂️
Fair enough, and this is why I was honestly interested in the first post that mentioned this feeling as I was wondering whether it was just me who has sensed a change in tone. Not a negative reaction, just more a muted reaction.

For example, I occasionally look through the Universal Orlando reddit group and my impression is that it skews positive overall, but probably more mixed than this forum in terms of trip reports.
 

JT3000

Well-Known Member
I think this is a good way of describing the vibe around Epic Universe since it opened to guests and why it stands out: few people seem blown away.

The response generally seems positive to me beyond what will hopefully be teething issues regarding reliability, capacity, and shade. However, it is more 'positive' than 'blown away', and I think expectations were set more toward the latter before it opened.
Blown away by what though? I don't think anyone has ever been blown away by an entire park. Certainly not one that just opened.

Obviously a lot of improvement is needed in operations, capacity, etc. That will likely work itself out in time. As far as the actual content of the park goes, you could reasonably argue that Epic Universe has the best ride in the world, the best-themed land, some of the best food, maybe even one of the best shows. Its lineup of experiences isn't lacking for a brand new park, and there are lots of superlatives you could throw at this park, but it's of course not all of the same quality, which wouldn't have been a realistic expectation or goal. Some of it is even outright disappointing, but that was bound to happen.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

JoeCamel

Well-Known Member
Nothing Official was said from UOR . However High Fireworks were in the concept art and there were enough Tests before EU that showed could do High Level Fireworks. Yes we saw a Spectacular on May 21st, but how far along is EU on a Regular Spectacular? Who Knows!

Same can said with the Flying Dragons
Comcast being the environmentally responsible company you would expect is limiting their use of the fireworks which as you know deposit heavy metals in the fallout zone and they don't want to return the site to superfund status.
Unlike their neighbor down the street that just shoots off anything willie nilly, anywhere
 
Last edited:

Andrew C

You know what's funny?
Comcast being the environmentally responsible company you would expect is limiting their use of them fireworks, which, as you know, produces heavy metals, and they don't want to return the site to superfund status.
Unlike their neighbor down the street that just shoots off anything willie nilly, anywhere
They could use the Disney cruise line ones and feed the birds.
 

Sir_Cliff

Well-Known Member
Blown away by what though? I don't think anyone has ever been blown away by an entire park. Certainly not one that just opened.
That is certainly reasonable, and the only park I can think of that opened in all the time I have been a fan (slightly post-DLP opening) that I think did blow people away as a whole was Tokyo DisneySea. I kind of remember more excitement around IOA post-opening, though I don't know if that is more a different time and hazier memories.

Again, this is where I am interested to see if it is just me reading things this way. My sense before opening was that the expectation was that this park would raise the bar for theme parks in Orlando. Since it has opened, I don't get the sense many people feel that it has.

Obviously a lot of improvement is needed in operations, capacity, etc. That will likely work itself out in time. As far as the actual content of the park goes, you could reasonably argue that Epic Universe has the best ride in the world, the best-themed land, some of the best food, maybe even one of the best shows. Its lineup of experiences isn't lacking for a brand new park, and there are lots of superlatives you could throw at this park, but it's of course not all of the same quality, which wouldn't have been a realistic expectation or goal. Some of it is even outright disappointing, but that was bound to happen.
I agree that all the short-term issues will likely be worked out and with all the features you mention. That's honestly why I have been a little curious to see what seems like such a muted reaction, because it's not like any of the headliners disappointed and it certainly has at least two of what look to be the best-themed lands in Orlando (or anywhere).

Anyway, I probably should stop going on about this vibe/impression as I am not trying to say that I think the park has opened to a negative reaction or been a disappointment. I don't think either is correct.
 

build_it

Well-Known Member
I think there is a disconnect where fans try and equate a full immersive environment to equal a more enjoyable visit or more excitement.
I have been to SWGE and it is very immersive, however, it falls short in so many ways that have little or nothing to do with immersion. If they would throw out the specific time and location, and included a wider variety of Star Wars as a full property, IMHO it would be way for enjoyable, but less immersive.
Just a thought as the immersive element seems to be a significant discussion point. Some of that Universal did to itself thru marketing, but I really believe some of it is the disconnect between immersion and enjoyment/entertainment.
 

hopemax

Well-Known Member
The ticket restrictions don't lend themselves to continuing discussion. Like pointed out, a lot of us already visited, and probably aren't in a position to go back for a little bit. We did 2 preview days, and my next visit will be 2 days in September. Which will also be my DH's first visit. I'll have stuff to say then. My Dad is a local and would love to go back, and would have gone back already if it was included in his AP to try more food. But he doesn't want to pay $140 to go by himself.

I still think Epic is a game changer in the same way I thought Harry Potter was a game changer. There was a lot of resistance among the Disney faithful that HP could possibly be that good, and change people's idea of the value of visiting Universal. But it wasn't ever going to be instantaneous. The change will be in how people think and plan their visits to central Florida. Also, the same as how DCL slowly, but surely started capturing WDW market. Universal is now in a position to capture a week long vacation (including a family's travel days). Especially, as the market regenerates itself with new children aging into Universal.

I also think because it’s been so long since a new park has opened in the US, people have poor expectations of what a brand new park is supposed to have and be like. I have been around long enough to remember the underwhelming and often negative reaction and marketing desperation surrounding the opening of both AK and DCA, and I don't get the same sense of that about Epic. For Epic, people want *more* while DCA was, "Why the heck did they build it like this?" and AK was a lot of confusion by the general public. Building out more is a much more solvable problem than people rejecting your entire underlying concept.
 
Last edited:

Tom Morrow

Well-Known Member
Are these a bunch of people that don’t do real adulting?
Uhh. Idk? Online theme park and roller coaster enthusiast communities that don't have Disney parks as their main focus like this one have been rife for a while with discussions about how Disney is "failing" and "no longer in first place". Again, the problem with social media bubbles - people end up in echo chambers of what they already believe, having it reinforced back to them. So while a lot of theme park fans may not agree with many of Disney's recent decisions (myself included), they equate all that negative feedback with their parks falling out of first place. But they are not.

I think there is a disconnect where fans try and equate a full immersive environment to equal a more enjoyable visit or more excitement.
I have been to SWGE and it is very immersive, however, it falls short in so many ways that have little or nothing to do with immersion. If they would throw out the specific time and location, and included a wider variety of Star Wars as a full property, IMHO it would be way for enjoyable, but less immersive.
Just a thought as the immersive element seems to be a significant discussion point. Some of that Universal did to itself thru marketing, but I really believe some of it is the disconnect between immersion and enjoyment/entertainment.

I've said this before and I'll say it again - I think that for most people, whether they can actually articulate it as an issue or subconsciously, would feel that being taken out of a highly themed environment by seeing backstage or out of the park is at least somewhat of a vibe killer. It's one thing to see out of SeaWorld - who cares? It's another to see the Kirkman Road extension from the Monsters outdoor queue.

I, personally, genuinely do take enjoyment in feeling fully immersed, even if I know it's fake, and I also enjoy seeing all the ways that the parks can accomplish it.

But I also acknowledge that full immersion alone is not enough for a theme park land to be fun. I recently concluded that SWGE is more immersive, detailed, and "real" feeling than the lands at Epic. But it also is ultimately less fun because it feels dead and lifeless, whereas the lands at Epic are full of life and kinetic movement.

I also think because its been so long since a new park has opened in the US, people have poor expectations of what a brand new park is supposed to have and be like. I have been around long enough to remember the underwhelming and often negative reaction and marketing desperation surrounding the opening of both AK and DCA, and I don't get the same sense of that about Epic. For Epic, people want *more* while DCA was, "Why the heck did they built it like this?" and AK was a lot of confusion by the general public. Building out more is a much more solvable problem than people rejecting your entire underlying concept.

Yeah, I guess I have to remember my first visit to AK. I remember thinking that it didn't feel like Disney and felt empty and incomplete, especially with having only two rides - Dinosaur (then Countdown to Extinction) and Kilimanjaro Safaris. Today it is my favorite of the WDW parks.
 

CosmicDuck

Well-Known Member
To add some perspective, my wife and I make an annual WDW trip every year. We spend about 4-5 days in the parks. We like Universal, but not enough to go back unless something major opens. We have only made 3 visits in the last 8 years.

We just got back from our most recent trip where we spent three days at Epic Universe. We left incredibly impressed, and cannot imagine a world for the foreseeable future we don't add one or two Epic days onto every trip. And our trips won't/can't get longer, so we'll sacrifice a Hollywood Studios day and probably a Magic Kingdom one to do it.

We'll visit those parks when something major opens. And that's how things slowly begin to shift.
 

MrPromey

Well-Known Member
Yeah, I guess I have to remember my first visit to AK. I remember thinking that it didn't feel like Disney and felt empty and incomplete, especially with having only two rides - Dinosaur (then Countdown to Extinction) and Kilimanjaro Safaris. Today it is my favorite of the WDW parks.
Epcot being only Disney's third park and the first non-castle had a huge uphill battle on opening, too.

The focus and intent was entirely different from MK and DL and there were a ton of people disappointed and flat out bored by it.

It was a park built with big huge ideas and possibly even greater ideals.

People, however, were looking for the next Pirates and Space Mountain and absolutely nothing there fit that bill.*

The closest thing to the MK was the Imagination pavilion and even that one was trying to teach you something. (the horror!)


*Ultimately, when you look at how the park has changed and what's been replaced, the original concept arguably never fully won the public over. Personally, I much prefer my childhood memories of the original park to a lot of what is in the front half today but if the general public had agreed, I doubt we'd have gotten Test Track, Mission Space and a Marvel property set up there and Frozen would have found a home at MK instead of being shoehornned into a country it doesn't belong in just to boost the popularity of World Showcase.
 

lazyboy97o

Well-Known Member
Epcot being only Disney's third park and the first non-castle had a huge uphill battle on opening, too.

The focus and intent was entirely different from MK and DL and there were a ton of people disappointed and flat out bored by it.

It was a park built with big huge ideas and possibly even greater ideals.

People, however, were looking for the next Pirates and Space Mountain and absolutely nothing there fit that bill.*

The closest thing to the MK was the Imagination pavilion and even that one was trying to teach you something. (the horror!)


*Ultimately, when you look at how the park has changed and what's been replaced, the original concept arguably never fully won the public over. Personally, I much prefer my childhood memories of the original park to a lot of what is in the front half today but if the general public had agreed, I doubt we'd have gotten Test Track, Mission Space and a Marvel property set up there and Frozen would have found a home at MK instead of being shoehornned into a country it doesn't belong in just to boost the popularity of World Showcase.
EPCOT Center visitation was very close to Magic Kingdom visitation. Despite the financial troubles at the studio, the parks remained so profitable that the entire company remained profitable. The story of EPCOT Center struggling out of the gate is just that, a story pushed by Roy E. to help justify his actions against his cousin’s husband whose ideas and successes would also be attributed to others.
 

Minnesota disney fan

Well-Known Member
Fair enough, and this is why I was honestly interested in the first post that mentioned this feeling as I was wondering whether it was just me who has sensed a change in tone. Not a negative reaction, just more a muted reaction.

For example, I occasionally look through the Universal Orlando reddit group and my impression is that it skews positive overall, but probably more mixed than this forum in terms of trip reports.
I've looked at other places too and they seem overwhelmingly positive for Epic. This is the only site that is not positive IMO.
 

MrPromey

Well-Known Member
EPCOT Center visitation was very close to Magic Kingdom visitation. Despite the financial troubles at the studio, the parks remained so profitable that the entire company remained profitable. The story of EPCOT Center struggling out of the gate is just that, a story pushed by Roy E. to help justify his actions against his cousin’s husband whose ideas and successes would also be attributed to others.
Epcot was included in the four seasons pass (I believe it was called) we had which is why my family went in the early years.

Having extended family who both went and worked that included cast members, I can say first-hand I experienced adults around me making these claims and when we went, it was almost never a full day visit to just Epcot. It's anecdotal, of course but unless Roy E. was pushing propaganda around Florida back in the early 80's to turn the hearts and minds of locals who visited, it wasn't JUST a story that people didn't immediately take to the concept upon initial visits.

Wait times were almost always better than things at the MK too which meant splitting time over there as passholders was always a connvenient way to break up the day and I was all for the long monorail ride and ready to be forever abandoned in Imageworks (which sadly, never happened).

There of course were no Youtube influenncers either to explain it, offer "tips" for it or bash it though so many people really wouldn't have had an opinion either way without visiting and again, Disney very much bundled it from the start.

Yeah, they had an opening special on TV but at a time when many households didn't even own VCRs, it's not like that kind of thing strongly informed the general public, either.

It was always my favorite park and I was young enough that long attractions teaching me about the history of communication and transportation and humantiny didn't seem odd since those were some of my earliest memories of actually going to WDW to begin with. Then again, you don't usually see a whole lot of adults without kids when visting Science and Industry or hands-on style museaums, either so it kind of makes sense as a kid, that would have been more impressive and interesting.

I'll admit to being bored as a kid with what we spent most of our time doing in World Showcase, though and I have to think that was a fairly universal (no pun intended) problem they recognized since they eventually started doing the Kidcot stuff.

I'm not saying Epcot "struggled" financially or in attendance but it opened as a bundled product attached to the MK with a form of transportation many would have considered an attraction in its own right linking the two so I think it's kind of difficult to view it in that sense because it never actually had to succeed solely on its own merits.

Disney openned Epcot and got many people through the turnstyles who were already there for MK. In contrast, Universal's forced many people to buy tickets for IOA and Studios to even be able to visit Epic so I'm not sure what point is to be made.

I will say I don't recall them (Disney with EPCOT Center) having any notable opening struggles with opperations or attraction uptimes. I would probably have been too young to be fully aware but I don't ever remember visiting and not being able to see the dinosaurs or Dreamfinder and Figment due to attraction downtime or b-modes.

I'm of course speaking here in the context of people commennting on how Epic is doing based on their observations arounnd internnet hype. I wonder what the discussions would have been about EPCOT back then during it's grand openning month if forums and reddit and youtube and tiktok would have been around.

I don't think anyone here is saying they're (Universal with Epic) financially struggling or having trouble selling tickets based on what we're seeing/hearing about this first month of official operation, either.
 
Last edited:

networkpro

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
Yes
The ticket restrictions don't lend themselves to continuing discussion. Like pointed out, a lot of us already visited, and probably aren't in a position to go back for a little bit. We did 2 preview days, and my next visit will be 2 days in September. Which will also be my DH's first visit. I'll have stuff to say then. My Dad is a local and would love to go back, and would have gone back already if it was included in his AP to try more food. But he doesn't want to pay $140 to go by himself.

I still think Epic is a game changer in the same way I thought Harry Potter was a game changer. There was a lot of resistance among the Disney faithful that HP could possibly be that good, and change people's idea of the value of visiting Universal.

I believe that Epic is more of a Universal "critical mass" game changer, but only after its integrated into the overall ticket availability and pricing strategy for all of the Comcast owned Orlando parks. The accommodations are better priced, (but that parking fee if you drive!) more centralized and closer to the parks than the competition, and Epics food , while pricey, overall right now is quite good and varied to the point that if available I'd park hop from Islands or Studios just to dine like we do to Eatcot.
 

Tom Morrow

Well-Known Member
I wonder what the discussions would have been about EPCOT back then during it's grand openning month if forums and reddit and youtube and tiktok would have been around.

I feel like the opening version of Epcot would have been even better received if it had opened with prior years of information and tracking of the project leading up to its opening. If more people had been primed to expect something completely different than Magic Kingdom, more people would not have been disappointed by it when they finally visited.

I didn't see Epcot until 1994, which was basically the final year of "original Epcot" but also it had been open long enough that people knew what to expect. I know as a kid in 1994 I didn't care about World Showcase at all, but I loved Future World.
 

DarkMetroid567

Well-Known Member
I still think Epic is a game changer in the same way I thought Harry Potter was a game changer. There was a lot of resistance among the Disney faithful that HP could possibly be that good, and change people's idea of the value of visiting Universal. But it wasn't ever going to be instantaneous. The change will be in how people think and plan their visits to central Florida. Also, the same as how DCL slowly, but surely started capturing WDW market. Universal is now in a position to capture a week long vacation (including a family's travel days). Especially, as the market regenerates itself with new children aging into Universal.
I think it’ll definitely shift things, but not in the way Potter did. Potter turned the market on its head and completely changed the design philosophy for theme parks. Epic doesn’t really do that, at least not to the same extent.
I believe that Epic is more of a Universal "critical mass" game changer, but only after its integrated into the overall ticket availability and pricing strategy for all of the Comcast owned Orlando parks. The accommodations are better priced, (but that parking fee if you drive!) more centralized and closer to the parks than the competition, and Epics food , while pricey, overall right now is quite good and varied to the point that if available I'd park hop from Islands or Studios just to dine like we do to Eatcot.
Park hopping from USF/IOA to the Epic resort area is unfortunately such a chore that I can’t see myself doing it.
 

Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.

Back
Top Bottom