ParentsOf4
Well-Known Member
Legacy FP helps with spontaneity where it matters the most.I don’t get how the legacy Fastpasses helped with spontaneity. You have to either run to the attraction you want or happen to be in the area to get one and then return during the 1 hour window. You can’t choose the one hour window or change it so you are set on when you have to use it. If you don’t like the return time, do you wait around until a later return, probably not so you just skip it or come back later. So I don’t see how FP+ makes this more difficult.
Each morning at WDW, I'd wake up and ask my family, "What park do you want to go to today?"
FP+ locks us into parks days and possibly weeks before arrival. FP+ locks us into specific attractions at specific times days and possibly weeks before arrival.
My experience with FP+ (see link) was that with above average crowd levels, it was nearly impossible to change FP+ selections on relatively short notice.
What I didn't post in that link was that more than a week before, I wanted to change my FP+ selections for a couple of attractions at the Magic Kingdom. The only times left for attractions such as Peter Pan, Space Mountain, and Big Thunder Mountain were late at night. (MK was opened till 1 AM when we visited.)
FP+ is not flexible when crowds are anything above moderate levels.
There is common sense to this. Disney can't let you change your FP+ selection from (for example) 10 AM to 2 PM if all FP+ ride capacity from 2 pm to 3 pm is already distributed. Yet if all FP+ selections are not distributed, then that means Standby lines are shorter anyway. At times like those, FP+ is less beneficial.
In other words, FP+ is less flexible exactly at the times when it would be most beneficial to be more flexible.