Touringplans has the crowd level predicted to be 7 out of 10 for that day. "Sold out" doesn't mean what it used to under this new reservation system - Disney uses it to even out the crowds somewhat so MK and HS often become unavailable nearer the date. One of our HS days on our vacation last month was sold out (not a Saturday, though) and it was manageable as far as getting into and around the park, mobile ordering, finding a place to sit for a few minutes, etc.We were considering changing dates due to the tropical storm. In research I found that hollywood studios is sold out for our day there (this coming Saturday)
Has anyone been on a sold out day? Is it absolutely miserable?
This entire post is a perfect example of why, after 20+ years, I stopped renewing my Annual Pass and no longer enjoy the WDW parks.I thought HS "sold out" most days now. Honestly, it's the absolute worst park from a lines standpoint: there's no such thing as a "good" day there, because it has so few attractions to absorb crowds. If fewer people have reserved it, Disney just lowers staffing and ride capacity, so lines still stay long.
That said, if you're staying on property you can still get in a couple attractions during early entry, and if you have parkhoppers, you can also visit more than once last thing in the evening when lines start to dip again. If you only have one day, I'd prioritize the top 4-5 headliners you want to do at HS, hit them first thing in the morning or last thing at night, and fill in the rest of the day (10am-7pm) by leaving and going elsewhere, or concentrating on shopping, meals, live shows, movie shorts, Star Tours, and Muppets. In trying to plan a day at HS, I found it helpful to chart out the hourly wait times for each attraction using touringplans data for the projected crowd level, so I could see which rides have wait times that jump up immediately and stay long all day, which ones take a couple of hours to break the 45-90 minute mark, and which ones dip considerably during the last hour of park operation. Having that information in your brain will help you react in the most nimble and time-efficient way if, say, you show up and find a planned attraction closed.
(For example, good morning combinations for the first 2 hours of park operation on a day with a touringplans crowd level of 7/10, especially if you have early entry, are Rise of the Resistance/Millennium Falcon/Rock 'n' Rollercoaster [or Tower of Terror], and a good evening combo for the last 2 hours of park operation is Slinky/Toy Story Midway Mania/Mickey & Minnie's Runaway Railway).
So basically, if you want rides, you will be in line 90%+ of your day.right now HS is not sold out and here are current wait times:
MMRR: 120 mins
MFSR: 105 mins
RnR: 'only' 45 mins
SDD: currently down
Star Tours: 55 mins
ROTR: 130 mins
TSMM: currently down
ToT: 120 mins
What a disgrace
I hate the game, but as very infrequent visitors whose visits have been getting progressively shorter, if we don't want to utterly waste our time, it's a game I've gotta play.This entire post is a perfect example of why, after 20+ years, I stopped renewing my Annual Pass and no longer enjoy the WDW parks.
Good point!I don't want to start an argument over the new paid system, but if you don't want to stand in lines all day, we had pretty good success on our vacation last month with Genie+ and ILL. It was a huge improvement over the fiasco we went through in April 2022 as far as using the app and getting the time windows we actually wanted.
Even though we only spent a few hours at HS we were able to get SDD, ToT, Star Tours, and MMRR without any wait at all. (We did Rise on a prior trip and had no desire to repeat it.) We didn't try for MFSR or RnR because we don't care for them.
I'm not advocating one way or the other, but prior answers in this thread are leaving out this info, which may be valuable to some who are new or not aware.
Not for the Parks Division, though. There's a ton of people in that park on this early November Monday.right now HS is not sold out and here are current wait times:
MMRR: 120 mins
MFSR: 105 mins
RnR: 'only' 45 mins
SDD: currently down
Star Tours: 55 mins
ROTR: 130 mins
TSMM: currently down
ToT: 120 mins
What a disgrace
Genie+ and ILLs were just under $220 for the two of us for 4 park days and we didn't stand in a single line. I know it's not for everyone, but it is available and people should be made aware of it. I much preferred FP+ which was free and worked better for us, but it doesn't exist anymore and we're not able to stand in the kinds of lines at WDW now.Good point!
We dumped as much money as we could into the express line options back in March. But back then, it did not work so good. We could only secure 2-3 attractions a day.
The VIP access that was included with Starcruiser was the best!
...so... start off with Starcruiser and do the best attractions while you are staying there.
I do not know what sold out means.We were considering changing dates due to the tropical storm. In research I found that hollywood studios is sold out for our day there (this coming Saturday)
Has anyone been on a sold out day? Is it absolutely miserable?
While I despise Genie+, I think you are forced to get it because the experience is so poor without it (and with it for that matter, just not a bad as having nothing)I don't want to start an argument over the new paid system, but if you don't want to stand in lines all day, we had pretty good success on our vacation last month with Genie+ and ILL (Used ILL in AK and Epcot). It was a huge improvement over the fiasco we went through in April 2022 as far as using the app and getting the time windows we actually wanted.
Even though we only spent a few hours at HS we were able to get SDD, ToT, Star Tours, and MMRR without any wait at all. (We did Rise on a prior trip and had no desire to repeat it.) We didn't try for MFSR or RnR because we don't care for them.
I'm not advocating one way or the other, but prior answers in this thread are leaving out this info, which may be valuable to some who are new or not aware.
Oh I don't blame you at all. It's the only way to at least get some sort of enjoyment out of the park. I just hate that there is a game to be played.I hate the game, but as very infrequent visitors whose visits have been getting progressively shorter, if we don't want to utterly waste our time, it's a game I've gotta play.
Or just got to universal and have a better time. Studios has never had much going for it and to be there when it is sold out is to just make yourself miserable.... and even worse when you end up having to pay extra to still be almost as miserable as before.Touringplans has the crowd level predicted to be 7 out of 10 for that day. "Sold out" doesn't mean what it used to under this new reservation system - Disney uses it to even out the crowds somewhat so MK and HS often become unavailable nearer the date. One of our HS days on our vacation last month was sold out (not a Saturday, though) and it was manageable as far as getting into and around the park, mobile ordering, finding a place to sit for a few minutes, etc.
That said, if you want to go on rides in a reasonable amount of time these days, my advice would be to get up a bit before 7 am, buy an ILL for RotR, buy Genie+ and start scheduling using the stacking method described in other threads. Standby wait times are pretty bad these days.
ETA: The post immediately above showed up while I was typing and also has some good ideas.
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