Slowjack
Well-Known Member
Well, I wasn't really trying to get into a quality debate. I really meant this in more of an investment perspective. I mean, regardless of how anyone feels about IoA (and again, it's not for me because it focuses too much on coasters and such), it's clear that Universal was really trying to hit a home run, a park that would rival Disney quality. Whether they achieved that is personal opinion, but I really think that was the intention from everything I read at the time, and I think they were very disappointed that the new park didn't siphoned off many people from WDW.Wow, Slowjack! I'd be very curious to hear what criteria you are using to judge IOA and DCA for their "quality."
(snip) But I just can't see either way how DCA bodes poorly for the future of theme parks. I've missed all the debates, though, so I understand I may be in the minority.
DCA, again, seems clearly to have been designed from the start to be inexpensive. I don't think that's a matter of huge debate, although I suppose on these boards anything can be a source of debate . Given that previous thoughts for the second park were Westcot or DisneySea, I don't think that the DCA concept won out because they thought future guests would consider this to be the most exciting park option. Instead I think it was a way of putting in a second park at reduced cost. I even saw an interview with Eisner at the time where he more or less admitted this, and said that they really needed the concept to work because he didn't want to keep making such huge capital investments in parks.
I'm here in Alabama and I've never seen DCA, so I'm not making a statement on which park is better, really, although I will say that I have no interest in visiting DCA. If I want to ride standard amusement park rides in a state-themed environment, I can do so here, at the similarly named Alabama Adventure. Obviously if you really like it, then you've got no worries.
To see my concern, though, I would offer the example of Dino-Rama in AK. It was a cheap way to add some addition ride capacity to a park, but it's not remotely Disney quality in my mind, and I think most people miss the theming concept entirely (it's suppose to be a roadside carnival but I know several people who thought Disney had just thrown it up on a real former parking lot). I don't think Dino-Rama did a lot for AK's attendance, certainly not like Everest did. But suppose Dino-Rama had been really successful...would we have ever gotten Everest? That's the thing I worry about.