WDW says, "Hold my beers around the world"...
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Upon closer inspection, and after following the fun conversation here, I realized you have included the Monorail and the upcoming Skyliner gondola system as "rides" in various theme parks. Your list even counts the Skyliner twice, as a ride in both Epcot and DHS, when it is in reality an aerial tramway from a handful of Moderate and Value hotels to DHS and Epcot and between.
I will have to respectfully disagree that those two things count as "rides" for any park in WDW, they are simply part of the property transportation system that many customers never use, or have no use for (If I'm staying at the Poly, why would I need to take a gondola from DHS to a Value motel? Certainly not to "experience" the food court or the Pop Warner teams running riot on the grounds.)
I wouldn't count the monorail, ferries or Skyliner as attractions considering they're transportation from one park to the other and you have to leave the park turnstiles to ride them. It's like counting the tram or the Busses to the Toy Story Lot as an attraction. I also wouldn't count the UK ride considering what we have is just rumors which can't seem to make up their mind.
I think the fair thing to do is remove the Monorail from the count as a "ride" at Disneyland, even though many would disagree with that. But we also need to remove the Monorail and the future Skyliner gondola system as theme park rides for WDW. After a little digging, you are also correct that the UK spinner is merely just a rumor and nothing has been announced by Disney.
This topic started after Disney formally announced that Disneyland would get Runaway Railway in 2022. We should stick to rides that either exist, are under construction, or have been formally announced by Disney. Rumors don't count.
With that, and removing the Monorail on both coasts and Skyliner gondolas from the ride tally, we have these numbers currently before Star Wars Land opens on either coast this summer, or Emotional Whirlwind opens this August.
April 2019 Ride Tally
Disneyland Park = 34 Rides, 11 are E Tickets
Disney California Adventure = 18 Rides, 5 are E Tickets
Disneyland Resort = 52 Rides, 16 are E Tickets
Magic Kingdom Park = 26 Rides, 7 are E Tickets
Epcot Center = 10 Rides, 4 are E Tickets
Disney's Hollywood Studios = 6 Rides, 3 are E Tickets
Disney's Animal Kingdom = 9 Rides, 5 are E Tickets
Walt Disney World Resort = 51 Rides, 19 are E Tickets
Announced Summer of 2022 Ride Tally
Disneyland Park = 37 Rides, 14 are E Tickets
Disney California Adventure = 20 Rides, 5 are E Tickets (this goes up by one E Ticket if Avengers Coaster is announced at D23)
Disneyland Resort = 57 Rides, 19 are E Tickets (58 Rides, 20 E Tickets if Avengers Coaster is announced)
Magic Kingdom Park = 27 Rides, 8 are E Tickets
Epcot Center = 12 Rides, 6 are E Tickets
Disney's Hollywood Studios = 9 Rides, 6 are E Tickets
Disney's Animal Kingdom = 9 Rides, 5 are E Tickets
Walt Disney World Resort = 57 Rides, 25 are E Tickets (58 Rides if UK Spinner is announced)
Um, okay. That surprised even me. After the huge E Ticket building spree that WDW is currently undergoing with six different E Tickets now under construction, that gets them to 57 rides, the same as Disneyland Resort in 2022 assuming the Avengers Coaster is not built by then. And if they do announce the Avengers Coaster this summer and it opens three years later, then Anaheim has 58 rides and still leads over WDW.
Since we are just weeks away from new rides starting to open in Anaheim, for much of calendar year 2019, Disneyland Resort will have 55 operating rides and 18 of them will be E Tickets
But still, the point is made and sits there for us to ponder, how did WDW's four theme parks that are all decades old fall so far behind on building rides for the last 25 years?!?
And God help those poor CM's later this year at DHS as they try to open Star Wars Land in a theme park that has only a half dozen other rides in that park! That's just going to get ugly for those CM's.