DivineMadness7
New Member
I'm going to wait until this is implemented to form an opinion. :shrug:
Great move. I've waited 20 minutes + on too many occasions to get wristbands. We find ourselves just hanging around the parks many times because the wristband line is so dang long.
It appears to me that this new information was added to the top of the old page that describes how the EMH work.
I love this idea. I just hope they also force all non-guests out of the parks too as they tend to clog up the shops and eateries.
Like always, I won't read through the pages, so feel free to ignore this post like I ignored everybody elses.
Great move. I've waited 20 minutes + on too many occasions to get wristbands. We find ourselves just hanging around the parks many times because the wristband line is so dang long.
Haven't they thought of the people who have had enough of the parks for the night and give a room key to their friends who are not on property guests.
Certainly a scanning system can be implemented. That's what they use at the park entrance. The bottleneck comes from the fact that an attraction has one entrance and one CM checking IDs. Park entrances, or the NYC subways, have many turnstiles for guests to go through. Just look at how long the lines are when getting wristbands, and there are often 2-3 CMs checking IDs and it still gets backed up. Why do you think clubs use wristbands after they've checked your ID? Because it's easier and faster to check than having guests pull out their IDs all the time.They've just traded one system for another. I can't see that this will change evening EMH any, and all the abuses will continue until they choose to waste an absurd amount of time and SCAN those ID's on the way into the attraction.
And before you say it can't be done, keep in mind thousands of subway travelers do it every day in NYC with metrocards, and those have a 14-minute time lock-out on them from when they were scanned to when they could be used again. I don't think we are very far from this system being implemented.
I guarantee guests who don't have their IDs out will be commonplace.If they're checking IDs at the tail end of the line, it's no big deal. Say there's 200 people ahead of you at the tail end of the line, before you get into the official queue. Those same 200 people would've still been in front of you INSIDE the official queue. If it takes a long amount of time to shift those 200 people in front of you from the EMH checkpoint to the "official queue," then there will be less of a wait inside the official queue.
In other words, it all balances out time-wise. The only exception would be if dillholes get to the checkpoint and then not have their IDs.
I guarantee guests who don't have their IDs out will be commonplace.
Also, any kind of bottlenecks increase the possibility that empty or partially filled rides/cars/etc. will be launched. This reduces the actual HRC, which does increase wait times. Basically if the queue is long, a bottleneck at the entrance will not do anything to wait times. If the queue is short or empty, the wait time will likely be increased for any guests held up at the entrance.
they dont really save on CMs... they go from distributing wristbands to checking IDs in different areas of the park...
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