Does anyone ever notice things on park maps that are considered...
Yea.. "attractions"..
Are there any "attractions" on the park maps that you would never personally consider as an "attraction."
One of my biggest pet peeves is when they put things like a meet and greet as an attraction. Unless you're counting a 200 minute wait for a photo opportunity for Disney's most over-rated princesses an "attraction," then I disagree with listing things like Fairytale Hall and Pete's Slideshow as an attraction.
The same goes to Tom Sawyer Island. Unless the rafts to get there themselves are called "Tom Sawyer Island." I consider the island a Frontierland-extension.. Not an attraction. I consider the actual transportation to get their an attraction. They don't make Rafiki's Planet Watch just an attraction at Animal Kingdom.. They title the train as the attraction.
..Not sure if anybody else has this problem. It falls under my really weird WDW annoyances category d:
EDIT: Also, keep in mind.. To each their own opinions on what their own definition of an "attraction" is!
This is a better description of what I was trying to come across..
Yea.. "attractions"..
Are there any "attractions" on the park maps that you would never personally consider as an "attraction."
One of my biggest pet peeves is when they put things like a meet and greet as an attraction. Unless you're counting a 200 minute wait for a photo opportunity for Disney's most over-rated princesses an "attraction," then I disagree with listing things like Fairytale Hall and Pete's Slideshow as an attraction.
The same goes to Tom Sawyer Island. Unless the rafts to get there themselves are called "Tom Sawyer Island." I consider the island a Frontierland-extension.. Not an attraction. I consider the actual transportation to get their an attraction. They don't make Rafiki's Planet Watch just an attraction at Animal Kingdom.. They title the train as the attraction.
..Not sure if anybody else has this problem. It falls under my really weird WDW annoyances category d:
EDIT: Also, keep in mind.. To each their own opinions on what their own definition of an "attraction" is!
This is a better description of what I was trying to come across..
I think this is kind of where the OP is coming from...
By the definitions mentioned earlier, just about anything in a theme-park could be considered an "attraction". Therefore, you either list every single thing on the map as an attraction...or...you reserve it for rides or things that offer special physical thrills, movement or motion, etc. Something you just walk-through or walk-up to or "enjoy along the way" should not really be considered attractions in terms of classifications on a map.
Imagine a huge, massive movie theater where they have to hand out maps for people to find their way around the complex. If you highlight the "attractions" on the map, one is going to assume those are movie theaters because the majority of people going to a theater are there to see a movie. Some might consider the arcade, the popcorn machine or the life-sized cardboard cut-out of a celebrity a draw, but the movies are what the majority people are there to enjoy, so those are what you list as the attractions on the map.
So while I agree that what one considers an "attraction" can be subjective, I think there is a certain threshold that has to be met for something to called such on a theme park map when the general destination for most park-goers is going to be the rides of motion and of physical movement thrills.
Heck, my wife and I consider the cake cups at Cheshire Café an attraction, but I don't think that's listed on the park map as such
Just IMHO of course.
Last edited: