News 'Beyond Big Thunder Mountain' Blue Sky concept revealed for Magic Kingdom

999th Happy Haunt

Well-Known Member
In the same way that HtTYD is really a Viking land, Zelda would basically be a medieval land with mythical beasts (and steampunk elements). You don’t necessarily need to know who the characters are. The hero has the sword. Also, while the games have iconic settings, they change their appearance and location in each game (other than last year’s direct sequel) which provides considerable creative latitude vs. a movie land.
At that point isn't Potter right next door a superior and more recognizable magic/mythical beasts land? There's a region the Merlinwood part of LC made sense to become Potter, aside from the expansion spaces they were too similar to coexist.
 

UNCgolf

Well-Known Member
The Amazing Adventures of Spider-Man. Which is becoming a Pokémon ride.

Sorry, I wasn't clear.

I only meant translating it from a video game to a ride that didn't end up feeling like a lesser version of what you experienced in the video game, because you're actually in control of what happens in the game, as opposed to just in general.
 

Bocabear

Well-Known Member
OK I know I am old, but I did play Mario years back....and I have absolutely no idea what those places and games are and absolutely no interest in seeing them in a theme park.... The park experiences should appeal to a broader audience... overall...More universal than gamers...And that is not a jab at gamers... I am just not the target audience...nor most of the people I know....
 

ToTBellHop

Well-Known Member
OK I know I am old, but I did play Mario years back....and I have absolutely no idea what those places and games are and absolutely no interest in seeing them in a theme park.... The park experiences should appeal to a broader audience... overall...More universal than gamers...And that is not a jab at gamers... I am just not the target audience...nor most of the people I know....
As Splash taught us, compelling attractions are compelling regardless of source material. As Journey Into Your Imagination taught us, completely original attractions that suck will suck.

IP does seem to boost the popularity of mediocre rides, though, because of the built-in fan base. See Fast and Furious.
 

peng

Well-Known Member
Nintendo Land FL will probably be a hit, but the MK ride does feel like a missed opportunity, sets are great, but the preshows are a bit confusing (the lack of dialogue seems like a Nintendo decision), rest of the land is executed amazingly though. But yeah, it doesn't matter how popular the IP is, if the ride sucks, people will avoid it, such as how the F&F ride in Orlando is usually a walk on, no matter how packed the rest of the park is. Yes I know there are other factors like capacity, but bad rides usually get short waits.
 

UNCgolf

Well-Known Member
As Splash taught us, compelling attractions are compelling regardless of source material. As Journey Into Your Imagination taught us, completely original attractions that suck will suck.

IP does seem to boost the popularity of mediocre rides, though, because of the built-in fan base. See Fast and Furious.

This is one of the biggest benefits to using IP. A ride can be mediocre and still a draw because of the IP (Frozen Ever After another great example). A mediocre non-IP ride is probably dead in the water.

The corresponding downside is that IP typically constrains what can be done and doesn't offer the freedom of something totally original, which maybe limits the ceiling. But from a business perspective, a higher floor/lower ceiling is generally more valuable than a lower floor/higher ceiling when you're investing millions (or hundreds of millions). They want to minimize risk.
 
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James Alucobond

Well-Known Member
OK I know I am old, but I did play Mario years back....and I have absolutely no idea what those places and games are and absolutely no interest in seeing them in a theme park.... The park experiences should appeal to a broader audience... overall...More universal than gamers...And that is not a jab at gamers... I am just not the target audience...nor most of the people I know....
I have never watched the Avatar films yet enjoy Pandora. Familiarity is not necessary, though it obviously helps drive interest. Here are some of the locations I mentioned, which I feel would be interesting to see realized:
loz_example.png

But with that said, I'll probably leave it there as this has veered into territory pertaining to Universal.
 

PizzaPlanet

Well-Known Member
OK I know I am old, but I did play Mario years back....and I have absolutely no idea what those places and games are and absolutely no interest in seeing them in a theme park.... The park experiences should appeal to a broader audience... overall...More universal than gamers...And that is not a jab at gamers... I am just not the target audience...nor most of the people I know....
The Mario movie made a billion and is now the second highest grossing animated film of all time. I understand it’s not for everyone but Mario definitely has multi generational appeal
 

Incomudro

Well-Known Member
OK I know I am old, but I did play Mario years back....and I have absolutely no idea what those places and games are and absolutely no interest in seeing them in a theme park.... The park experiences should appeal to a broader audience... overall...More universal than gamers...And that is not a jab at gamers... I am just not the target audience...nor most of the people I know....
Not only do I have zero interest, the very aesthetic of Mario actually annoys - yes - annoys me.
I've felt that way since the game debuted.
The look, the sound, all irritating.
 

ChrisFL

Premium Member
Not yet - though Extraterrorestrial Encounter could have sufficed?

Alien (MGM Great Movie Ride) and Terminator show (Universal) are the only R-rated properties to be represented in parks IIRC

The old Alfred Hitchcock show and Horror Make-up Show both came with warnings that it was recommended for people over 13 years of age (not sure if that is still listed for the Horror Make-up Show). That's the closest I can think of.
 

ChrisFL

Premium Member
Imagine a themepark/resort with the following IPs:
  • World of Warcraft
  • Halo
  • League of Legends
  • Minecraft
  • Diablo
  • Final Fantasy
  • Witcher
  • Elder Scrolls

Minecraft would hurt my eyes, lol.

Someone said Final Fantasy would have to stick to one of the games since there's such a variety and IMO it would HAVE to be 7...no other game comes close in popularity, BUT there's a lot of areas in that game that are massive (especially now in Rebirth).

Funny thing though...does Midgar remind anyone of anything?
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ToTBellHop

Well-Known Member
Minecraft would hurt my eyes, lol.

Someone said Final Fantasy would have to stick to one of the games since there's such a variety and IMO it would HAVE to be 7...no other game comes close in popularity, BUT there's a lot of areas in that game that are massive (especially now in Rebirth).

Funny thing though...does Midgar remind anyone of anything?
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I don’t think Walt would have wanted Wall Market!

How could you pick just one location from FFVII, though? I can’t pick just one. I was probably most excited for Cosmo Canyon this go around.
 

Delta-7

Active Member
Hi, I’ve been reading on this forum lately and trying to catch up on the loads of rumors about this project.

Okay, I know a lot of people are against having a Woody attraction at Magic Kingdom. But if it were to happen, what type of attraction could it be? Also I really hope Disney takes into account how Test Track has to shut for rain if they consider adding RSR as part of Beyond BTM.

As for Villains land, is there really a chance that it could go to Hollywood Studios instead? I get that decision because it would add a mature feel to a park that I guess was initially supposed to be mature in tone, although I really want it at Magic Kingdom. I think it would be a good segue between a “Day of the Dead” corner of a Coco area and the Haunted Mansion. I also think the world’s most attended theme park can use all the more attraction capacity it can get.
 

Oldschool46

New Member
The white model "pan" in We Call It Imagineering episode 1 looks like an iteration
of this project, with fantasy (Maleficent's Castle?) and Radiator Springs elements,
plus what appear to be plenty of water features. Featured at D23? One can hope.
 

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