MrPromey
Well-Known Member
I guess it hasn't reached critical mass point yet.
That begs the question of Why are folks still going to Disney?
There has to be something we are missing, if people know they are getting screwed and still signing up to go, what are we missing.
That's a serious question for any vacation venue.
Well I still go... because I have (an admitted) problem that I have also instilled in a young child which just makes it worse.
For people that don't really think about money, the hassle alone of what has become a modern day trip there probably hasn't become enough to turn them off, yet.
A lot of other people that I know who go simply don't really grasp it all until they go, despite my warnings, links to planning sites, discussions about fastpass, and so on. They all just think I'm crazy and exagerating. Then they come back and say "never again".
They talk about the prices of everything, the crowds, the lines, how it's impossible to get into restaurants.
It's possible I just know a lot of bumpkins. (I'm not ruling that out)
That said, I think we take for granted that there is tons of planning involved but a lot of people who haven't been before (and this seems to get worse, the physically closer they are to the parks when you set out to get there) still don't seem to grasp this.
As an example of what I'm talking about, for as much as booking reservations half a year out and booking fastpasses 60 days out is a known thing around here, you always still see plenty of people at those ticket booths.
Most of those people won't be getting fastpasses for Flight of Passage, or Seven Dwarfs Mine Train... Or likely any of the good e-tickets. They'll stumble through the parks, balk at the rides with hour+ waits, mostly do the stuff with shorter waits which tends to not be as good, have sticker shock at the merchandise prices for stuff that feels cheap (especially a lot of the stuff geared towards kids), complain about the lousy QS food and the prices for said food. Then they'll go home complaining about how they paid such high prices to go in and walk around all day without doing much and about how what they did do hardly seemed worth it, saying their kids can go again when they're old enough to pay for themselves.
Outside of our slightly unhinged bubble, I think there are a lot of one-and-done families out there who gave their kids that requisite "once-in-a-lifetime" experience and I think Disney is cool with that, as long as new ones keep coming in.
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