I figured out how to sink stuff in water. And it tested it with guests going through underwater paths and they did not drown. But if you place them on the path, they drown. But this is good news for Sea Base.
Because nobody read my other topic, here is some info on Seabase. (mostlikely going to be renamed SeabaseOmega)
Guests enter a Purple and light blue building along one of the coasts of the park's center lake. Here, guests board real elevators or take stairs down to a large underground room. The Elevators have a view into the lake but the underwater part is kinda obscure right now until the seacabs. Under the entrance building is a large underground room. The Staircase comes down one side while a large sheet of water covers the other. Guests enter under the waterfall into the Seacab line. Here, the room is a large steel area and in the back is the actual omnimovers. There isn't anything special due to the ride's high capacity.
Once onboard, the guests are informed about how the oceans came to be through several dark underground caves. (the paths above are built 15 feet above the level of the lakes out side the park, 5 above in park lakes). After the several scenes, guests enter an underwater tunnel and the ride informs about life being created in the seas. The omnimover then goes through a couple more caverns progressing the story until it enters another underwater tunnel through the lake. Once through, the car enters a wet-for-dry tunnel and the area appears underwater when it is not. Caves are put in the sides and up ahead two glowing white lights appear in the distance. The cars appoach until the Seabase appears and the car enters. Soon, the guests are looking into the 200 foot+ diameter aqaurium. The Cars go around, then through to the center before heading back out where guests unload.
The area is built like the living seas but with a more modern design. A lot of "natural rock formations" cut through the steel of the sea base and there are several other major rides within this attraction, I will get to that later.
Because nobody read my other topic, here is some info on Seabase. (mostlikely going to be renamed SeabaseOmega)
Guests enter a Purple and light blue building along one of the coasts of the park's center lake. Here, guests board real elevators or take stairs down to a large underground room. The Elevators have a view into the lake but the underwater part is kinda obscure right now until the seacabs. Under the entrance building is a large underground room. The Staircase comes down one side while a large sheet of water covers the other. Guests enter under the waterfall into the Seacab line. Here, the room is a large steel area and in the back is the actual omnimovers. There isn't anything special due to the ride's high capacity.
Once onboard, the guests are informed about how the oceans came to be through several dark underground caves. (the paths above are built 15 feet above the level of the lakes out side the park, 5 above in park lakes). After the several scenes, guests enter an underwater tunnel and the ride informs about life being created in the seas. The omnimover then goes through a couple more caverns progressing the story until it enters another underwater tunnel through the lake. Once through, the car enters a wet-for-dry tunnel and the area appears underwater when it is not. Caves are put in the sides and up ahead two glowing white lights appear in the distance. The cars appoach until the Seabase appears and the car enters. Soon, the guests are looking into the 200 foot+ diameter aqaurium. The Cars go around, then through to the center before heading back out where guests unload.
The area is built like the living seas but with a more modern design. A lot of "natural rock formations" cut through the steel of the sea base and there are several other major rides within this attraction, I will get to that later.