rushtest4echo
Well-Known Member
Here's the thing, Disney is going to be accused of copying this from Universal, who in turn copied the Lapu from Disney's Magic Band. The big thing is, Universal probably spent less than 1% of what Disney spent on their system.
Probably true, but most the development costs for MM+ are not really the usage of MagicBands or fastpass. It was the infrastructure that went into hard wiring the tens of thousands of touch points into a massive database system that manages payments, ticketing, reservations for rides and restaurants, communications for all rooms resort wide and the hotel room locks themselves. Just the cost to run everything and to retrofit the tens of thousands of user end hardware was enormous. Heck, if it cost Disney say $10000 in labor and materials to hard wire in touch points at each hotel room door, that's already $250 million and that's not counting any networks, trunk lines, and other infrastructure they probably needed. At the parks, it was probably tens of thousands of dollars per point too, and there are hundreds. Not that I think those investments aren't wise in the long run, but it's very expensive. I'm sure the wireless networks resort wide were not cheap either.
Universal doesn't have to bother with any of that, because, frankly, they're comfortable handing a family of four 4 or 5 sets of passes/tickets/keys per person and not having any sort of advance reservation system for rides or dining beyond phone calls and express passes. Which is fine, but DIsney's stuff is much more convenient and has proven to increase per caps. Iger seems comfortable that the costs involved with MM+ (even the delays and overruns) will benefit the company and customers in the long run.
Universal's beginning to adopt a similar strategy at their water park, though I'm sure it's much cheaper to build it in that to retrofit. But the guest service capabilities of Tapu Tapu are standard in the industry and still don't work around the other 90% of what Universal offers. MM+ is entirely different and is actually "innovative" whether people care for it as a system. Personally, I'm shocked that Universal hasn't at least adopted some of MM+ schemes, without the hardwiring and databases. They could still do a lot with RFID and wireless readers that Disney did with MM+.
Last edited: