Lightning Lane at Walt Disney World

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
You may be right; I'm still dusting the cobwebs off of my old FP+ planning knowledge. The psychology of attraction tiers just seemed like it might give a reason their could be lower T1 availability day-of. I'm really curious to see what happens when the actual usage data starts rolling in. That's when the real strategy fun begins.
Tiers weren’t “psychology”…they were a public admission that their attraction slate wasn’t good enough day to day to diffuse the demand so they all complimented each other.
 

Vegas Disney Fan

Well-Known Member
The use one book one feature of multi pass is intriguing to me for this reason. You can have 1 or 2 set attractions for later in the day while still being able to take advantage of the rolling FP/LL.
It will be interesting to see what’s available a couple hours after park opening, I always booked our FPs in the 11am-2pm range, that was when the parks became so chaotic we struggled to find anything to do, I love knowing we have 3 rides to look forward to when the parks are insanely busy, we’ll most likely stick to this plan unless the next several months show there’s decent availability a couple hours into the day, in that scenario I think I’ll still book 2 of them for 11-2 but book the third close to opening to try to snag a fourth before the afternoon hotel break.

We’ve never been power users, to us the true value is in maximizing park time over maximizing the number of rides we get on.
 

GhostHost1000

Premium Member
It will be interesting to see what’s available a couple hours after park opening, I always booked our FPs in the 11am-2pm range, that was when the parks became so chaotic we struggled to find anything to do, I love knowing we have 3 rides to look forward to when the parks are insanely busy, we’ll most likely stick to this plan unless the next several months show there’s decent availability a couple hours into the day, in that scenario I think I’ll still book 2 of them for 11-2 but book the third close to opening to try to snag a fourth before the afternoon hotel break.
that might not be a bad idea.. just hard to know. If we'll be able to modify 2 tier 2's to a tier 1 at 7am, there will be many start to do that as well... and therefore the 7am scramble is back
 

Vegas Disney Fan

Well-Known Member
that might not be a bad idea.. just hard to know. If we'll be able to modify 2 tier 2's to a tier 1 at 7am, there will be many start to do that as well... and therefore the 7am scramble is back
I wonder if Disney will have the foresight to have the app limit reservations to one tier 1 at a time to limit trickery, that could be a good hack but also would vastly decrease how long the tier 1s last.

As someone who doesn’t like waking up early to the stress of trying to get VQs, etc I hope they limit it.
 

ConfettiCupcake

Well-Known Member
that might not be a bad idea.. just hard to know. If we'll be able to modify 2 tier 2's to a tier 1 at 7am, there will be many start to do that as well... and therefore the 7am scramble is back

I think 7 am is marginally improved now because:

1) those interested in maximizing their day know rope drop is vital in those plans and they’re probably up anyways

2) those who liked to stack and come in later now at least have a starting point of 1 desirable attraction and 2 of varying degrees of time saving without having to wake up at all

To me, it doesn’t matter where Disney shifts the scramble time to. Itll always be at some time of the day that’s inconvenient for someone because they just don’t have enough to go around.
 

GhostHost1000

Premium Member
I wonder if Disney will have the foresight to have the app limit reservations to one tier 1 at a time to limit trickery, that could be a good hack but also would vastly decrease how long the tier 1s last.
I wonder that as well... after all the talk about that potentially being a "work around" to get more Tier 1's... I could see them implementing a change like that. It wouldn't be hard to do logically, but changing that after the fact might get some interesting reactions
 

Saskdw

Well-Known Member
I think 7 am is marginally improved now because:

1) those interested in maximizing their day know rope drop is vital in those plans and they’re probably up anyways

2) those who liked to stack and come in later now at least have a starting point of 1 desirable attraction and 2 of varying degrees of time saving without having to wake up at all

To me, it doesn’t matter where Disney shifts the scramble time to. Itll always be at some time of the day that’s inconvenient for someone because they just don’t have enough to go around.
Technically you could have 2 top attractions if you book a paid LL and then your 3 pre-books.
 

ConfettiCupcake

Well-Known Member
There were basically no “good” rides available day of during prebooking prior

To assume now there will be is a belief that not enough people will buy it.

Possible

The problem is the standbys will get worst - again - and they have multiple breakdowns of damn near everything each day

Just badly run…nothing more you can say

This is why I think 7 am switch scramble may be moot, and it’s the refreshing and drop times after the parks open that may be the best bet. You’re right, availability was generally crap when you got close enough to the day but was workable if you knew how to mess with it during the day.
 

Vegas Disney Fan

Well-Known Member
There were basically no “good” rides available day of during prebooking prior

To assume now there will be is a belief that not enough people will buy it.

Possible

The problem is the standbys will get worst - again - and they have multiple breakdowns of damn near everything each day

Just badly run…nothing more you can say
If I can snag either Space or Big Thunder along with HM and PotC for that dreaded afternoon timeframe I’ll be thrilled, assuming it’s $20-25.

I agree it’s going to be hard to get good rides beyond that though, most of the rides I’d hope for after the initial 3 are on the tier 1 list and will likely be gone very early in the day.
 

JAB

Well-Known Member
Tiers weren’t “psychology”…they were a public admission that their attraction slate wasn’t good enough day to day to diffuse the demand so they all complimented each other.
My post was more about the unintended psychological effect of categorizing attractions (i.e. the Country Bears Effect) causing uninformed guests to assume higher-category attractions are "better," and not about any intentional psychology in Disney's implementation of tiers.
 

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