Tom Morrow
Well-Known Member
My gut tells me that this is still going to be a very good or great ride, but perhaps not the knockout it's been hyped up as. I do have a few concerns - the aforementioned drop track building, the fact that at several points, the track comes right up to a backstage service road that will be very hard to hide, and that it may end up looking more like a well-landscaped coaster than the forbidden forest. But who knows, maybe I'll end up eating my words. I hope so. Also just so we're clear, if any other park other than Universal or Disney were building this I wouldn't be criticizing anything because it's obviously beyond the scope of what pretty much anyone else could do.I so much want to love this ride, so I don't mean to sound negative, but does anyone else have this sinking feeling that it's not quite going to live up to its concept?
The idea of flying around the Forbidden Forest in Hagrid's Motorbike spotting magical creatures feels like total wish-fulfillment, and a great concept for the ride, but realizing that with an outdoor coaster among real planted vegetation seems like a let-down compared to Potter's other signature rides.
Gringotts has some story issues, but it's pretty beautifully realized, and Forbidden Journey feels about as immersive as anything. I can't help but think between the exposed track and reliance on real plants that guests are never going to be able to feel like they're really flying or that they're really in the thick, dense, dark Forbidden Forest. I would think an Indoor Dark Ride would have been the obvious method for realizing such an adventure, where you can simulate the forest, control the lighting, mask-out the ride track, and fill it with creatures that need not stand up to the elements. Maybe a short outdoor section before heading into a large showbuilding if they want the "weenie" of the motorbikes flying over the treetops . . .
This seems to me like the kind of ride that should really come alive at night. I'm super excited to ride it and will likely make a special trip after opening just to give it a whirl, but the more I look at photos the more I find myself trying to manage my own expectations. The idea feels like a total home run, but the execution doesn't yet appear to be on that level.
Because Na'Vi River Journey is definitely the most comparable indoor ride?An indoor dark ride with this amount of track? Are we still talking about a roller coaster or another slow boat ride? Id much rather go whizzing through actual vegetation with real pine scents instead of moving past fiberglass and Disney smell-o-vision.
But yeah, I am glad this is outdoors. It allows the track to cover a much bigger area, provides different experiences depending on the weather and time of day, and it forced Universal to build large scale physical sets. I bet this will be amazing at night time.
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