ShoalFox
Well-Known Member
- In the Parks
- Yes
First time was in 2007Did you go in 2001, when it first opened?
First time was in 2007Did you go in 2001, when it first opened?
First time was in 2007
I missed the beginning but God I was there to see Sun Plaza. It was the most soulless place ever in any Disney park. I remember really loving Grizzly Peak. I know we spent a couple hours just walking around and soaking in the nature. Then you headed out to Paradise Pier and saw that giant orange and...I figured that. You had to have been there during DCA's very early years to understand why no one liked it.
I didn't realize there was no Tower of Terror on opening day!
I didn't realize there was no Tower of Terror on opening day!
It's not a question of limited money so much as it is about limited guest enthusiasm for compounding anniversary dates and signage space. Of the two anniversaries, the 60th was definitely the most important and the most profitable, so Disney wisely chose not to put too much peanut butter in the chocolate.
In that case, DCA would never receive an anniversary celebration, as Disneyland guests aren't crazy about the park.
They will be by the 20th.
They will be by the 20th.
DCA needs more family rides. Not on the level of a Bugs Land either. I'm talking good, quality attractions the whole family can enjoy together. My husband hates thrill rides, and he doesn't care much for DCA because there isn't much for him to do that's actually fun. He doesn't care about any of the Paradise Pier attractions other than Toy Story and Mermaid, he likes Soarin, Monster Inc, Animation Academy, and that's about it!
I think that is more the lack of any single vision for the park. $1 billion in glitz and glitter isn't what creates a lasting emotional experience. The park still lacks a heart and its vision is not much more than an expensive amusement park of franchises.My point was it's really not about what the fans want. We wanted a 55th and pretty much got nothing.
Five years won't change much. DCA's problem is its location. If it didn't sit across from Disneyland, the original magic kingdom, the "one and only," I believe it would be more popular. DCA will never earn the same respect and love Disneyland receives from its fans. DCA 2.0 has pretty much proven that. The park received at least one billion dollars worth of new additions, and the crowds are still ridiculously uneven.
I think that is more the lack of any sing glue vision for the park. $1 billion in glitz and glitter isn't what creates a lasting emotional experience. The park still lacks a heart and its vision is not much more than an expensive amusement park of franchises.
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