Nothing to do with marketing. So far as I know it’s not been marketed as an E. Or D.and more like a marketing ploy
Nothing to do with marketing. So far as I know it’s not been marketed as an E. Or D.and more like a marketing ploy
It's probably more dignified to be a cheap park and lift yourself up then to be a sublime park and drag yourself into the gutter.Looks a lot better than the views of Tron from Storybook Circus. At least there is light theming there.
Yeah I don’t think that’s the comparison…never mind.Looks a lot better than the views of Tron from Storybook Circus. At least there is light theming there.
Tower wasn't even 1.0, the park existed for a full 5 years before it opened. For the first 3 or so years that spot was just a big empty yard right in the middle of the park.ToT from behind looks like some depressing HLM in Bobigny...
The cheapness of 1.0 of this park will haunt it for decades.
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Which is the theme park hotel?
Hong Kong is trilingual even. Cantonese, English, Mandarin. Very noticeable at their Jungle Cruise, which has three lines, one for a cruise in each language.
Explain why you think it’s a “shot” - don’t just say it’s not a good comparison without explaining.Yeah I don’t think that’s the comparison…never mind.
Take your shot I guess.
I don’t understand your original post either.Explain why you think it’s a “shot” - don’t just say it’s not a good comparison without explaining.
I’m saying the back of the Tower in Paris is themed. The completely unthemed tron box is visible from inside the MK park.I don’t understand your original post either.
What are you trying to say?
Barely.I’m saying the back of the Tower in Paris is themed. The completely unthemed tron box is visible from inside the MK park.
i never said it did?Plus that’s not gonna ruin the entirety of MK for the majority of guests.
Well it’s going to be visible to anyone visiting the new extension of the park. Anyone taking a photo from Arendelle across the lake will probably have it in shot.i never said it did?
Does the backside of the tower in Paris ruin a day for guests?
It was already visible to guests from inside the park. It still looks like an old abandoned hotel.Well it’s going to be visible to anyone visiting the new extension of the park.
It was, but it’s now the backdrop to half the park, the part that has the water and themed lands that everyone knows is desperately needed.It was already visible to guests from inside the park. It still looks like an old abandoned hotel.
I was about to say it looks kinda ugly despite being “lightly themed”.Well it’s going to be visible to anyone visiting the new extension of the park. Anyone taking a photo from Arendelle across the lake will probably have it in shot.
It’ll also be the backdrop for around half the audience of the new show.
They rarely if ever use the ticket designations for marketing purposes upfront, with few exceptions (Mermaid being one of them from recollection).Nothing to do with marketing. So far as I know it’s not been marketed as an E. Or D.
Exactly.They rarely if ever use the ticket designations for marketing purposes upfront, with few exceptions (Mermaid being one of them from recollection).
Random show building that is right there, visible from multiple angles and is what you see walking into the attraction.I was about to say it looks kinda ugly despite being “lightly themed”.
Definitely more visible than random showbuilding at the back of the MK.
The ticket designations are not thought about purely in isolation. The reason they continue to be used both inside Disney and elsewhere is to convey a sense of scope and scale.I think there's a nuanced difference in how WDI uses the ticket designations vs. fans:
Fans compare the ticket designations (which don't really officially exist anymore) across the globe. WDI thinks a little bit more in terms of "amount of draw within a land." When describing FEA in the WDS Reinvention Project, this attraction is "the E ticket" insofar as it is the "big attraction that will be the featured focus of the project."
They aren't saying, "Hmm... how does this compare to Tokyo's Tower of Terror? It's not that good. Hmm... what about France's Tower of Terror? Well it's better (arguably) than that... hmm... Is it better than Incredicoaster, yes, but not as good as Shanghai Pirates..."
By virtue of the role it plays in the whole expansion, Frozen Ever After is "The E ticket" - it will now be the number 1 (or maybe 2 or 3) reason for guests to visit that park. It will certainly be marketed that way. The Epcot version is inferior but it is basically the same ride. However the role it plays in the whole Epcot concept (both experience and marketing) is more like a C or D ticket.
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