Any that you can name for us?
On Sunday evening, I was shocked by how close the tables at San Angel Inn were. I know that restaurant is notorious for overcrowding, so they may have spaced things out slightly from their standard setup, but tables were still closer than a typical restaurant in the real world in pre-Covid times.
I was in a rush to get on the boat ride right before park closing, so I didn't think to grab a picture, but other parties in the queue also commented on how tightly packed the seating arrangement was. It looked like the tables had less than 2' of space between them side-to-side, and only slightly more space back-to-back between the rows of occupied seats. Again, we were in a rush so we didn't get the closest look, but as best we could tell it appeared as though all tables were occupied at the time.
That would only happen if it was taken to the extreme. There would be no reason to inflate the wait times by something like 45 minutes, and even if you did for a few rides, you could leave others closer to actual wait times with only minor inflation to avoid that scenario.
I don't think that's really an issue for the vast majority of guests. They don't pay close enough attention to notice that type of recurrence unless it's wildly inaccurate. It's going to mostly lead to people happier that "hey we didn't have to wait as long as we thought!". More importantly, you don't want the wait times to ever be too low. People typically get angry very quickly in that scenario. If there's a posted wait time of 45 minutes and they actually have to wait 60, there will a ton of complaints and frustration.
While it's true that it's only really an issue when the wait times are wildly inaccurate, many of the current posted wait times are just that.
In the last week, we rode Everest on multiple days when it had a 15-minute posted wait, but was really a walk-on (though it takes a couple minutes to walk through the full queue). Flight of Passage listed a 55-minute wait, but only took 30. Frozen Ever After said it had a 35-minute wait, but only took about 15. The most egregious was yesterday morning, when Space Mountain listed a 40-minute wait (increased from 35 a few minutes prior), but we were onboard in under 10.
Most of the attractions in all 4 parks were reasonably close to their posted waits; they may be off by 5-10 minutes, but those are fine. However when mixed with so many that are completely wrong, it creates a challenging experience as a park guest. As a result, it's difficult to gage whether or not to trust the signage, which is particularly important in a time like this when even semi-regular visitors can't eyeball a queue length based on where it ends. If a sign says it's a 45 minute wait, it's really hard for me as a guest to make the informed decision as to whether that really means 15 minutes or 45 minutes. And when the wait time is actually what it says it is, you feel like you've been somehow cheated.
Yes, it's tough to adapt to a new set of circumstances, but the parks have been operating under these conditions for about 6 months now. We constantly saw CMs adjusting the wait times on their queue signs according to how far back it stretched, so it's not a matter of signage in need of updating. Either the CMs are well-intentioned-yet-oblivious to the operating reality they've had for months, or this is an intentional directive from management. Given some of the intentionally-coy answers we got when asking various CMs in various departments across the resort about all sorts of different protocols, I suspect the latter. And when the information is this blatantly wrong, it only leads to mistrust from your customers.