The Soarin' ride system includes wind and scents, and has since it was first opened in California.
Yes, Soarin in DCA and Soarin in Epcot are pretty much the same attraction.
I was talking about the rides that followed those.
The Soarin' ride system includes wind and scents, and has since it was first opened in California.
Sorry if I'm contributing to thread drift, but I've long thought that Disney is missing out on the true potential of this ride system. I do enjoy the various scenes in the current version, but I have always felt that a continuous shot with no scene cuts throughout the ride would maximize the realism and feeling of it. I know...they couldn't show all of California that way, but the visceral effect of the ride itself could be much more intense if the whole ride were one long shot. And while we are "plussing" it, why use reality for filming at all? What kind of story or flight could we go on if the film were all or in part done in CGI? I hear Disney bought a film company a few years ago that specializes in CGI..... :drevil:
Your wording implied that the wind and scents are part of what makes the Vekoma version distinct.Yes, Soarin in DCA and Soarin in Epcot are pretty much the same attraction.
I was talking about the rides that followed those.
No CGI please!!! The uncanny valley has still not been crossed. Photorealism has not been met, and until that point, give me the real thing. CGI just doesn't cut it.And while we are "plussing" it, why use reality for filming at all? What kind of story or flight could we go on if the film were all or in part done in CGI? I hear Disney bought a film company a few years ago that specializes in CGI..... :drevil:
My opinion is that entering at floor level had little to do with slow load times. Think of the amount of time you have to wait to board the attraction now. It consistently has the longest wait time in Epcot.
I think that the truth is that most Americans are not physically fit enough or driven enough to board any other way. They would complain and/or maybe avoid the attraction. My guess is that WDI knew that but of course couldn't say it.
As for the queue splitting off, Soarin at WDW has a queue that splits.
It'd be cool if they changed it every so many years. Maybe other countries or states.
I don't think it has anything to do with people not being fit. Have you noticed the walk you need to make to just get down to Soarin. So that has nothing to do with it. It was just quicker to have people load from the floors especially wheel chair accessibility wise.
I'm guessing you are unaware of this ride?
![]()
That's Xpress of Walibi World in Holland. Originally called Superman: The Ride. It is pretty much the exact same ride as RnR, just without the nifty WDI theming and Aerosmith music. I think it opened a year later.
By the way, I've ridden Rockin' with the lights on and music off. Let me tell you, that's a pretty boring coaster without the dark and black light effects and awesome music.
Actually, I just looked closer at the ride system here. It is different. This is a knock-off in the worst way. This one boards at different levels like Back to the Future/Simpsons, but with the ride vehicles of Soarin.
Express is not so much similar, as much it is the same. Rock 'n Rollercoaster (both), Gadget's Go Coaster, and The Barnstormer at Goofy's Wiseacre Farm (modified mirror) are all coasters that were pre-designed by Vekoma and can, and have been, sold to other companies. Even going back to 1955, Disney has consulted and worked with other amusement ride companies. Even the Matterhorn was developed in conjunction with Arrow Development, which is why that company went on to sell steel roller coasters to other parks. Some systems are developed in-house at WED/Walt Disney Imagineering, but not all of them. No point in reinventing the wheel if another company has experience doing exactly what Disney wants done. What Disney does is have Walt Disney Imagineering come in and put on custom bodies and often times custom ride control software (in the case of California Screamin' the customization was so significant that Intamin has since disowned the coaster and no longer considers it one of theirs).I was aware of Xpress (spend a lot of time on RCDB) i just thought it was funny they had two ride systems pictured that are similar to Disney attractions
What this ride really needs is a purpose and tie in to the Land pavilion, because frankly it seems like it fits in a lot better at DCA (at least the queue is better there!)
Because the only part of the land it shows is California, and then it finishes in Disneyland. And, I mean, giant iron bridges and deluxe golf resorts and military instruments and busy highways weaving through skyscrapers are not exactly the "beauty of the land."Soarin is a video that shows how beautiful 'the land' is...how does it not fit?
They get around the patent issue by making a change to the design. WDI designed the Soarin' ride system to load at floor-level. They did this to eliminate the need for stairs and ramps to load at multiple levels.
Vekoma just took the step backwards, and made a ride system that loads on multiple levels and then just pushes the ride vehicles straight outward toward the screen. (You can see the multiple levels in the upper-right photo on the linked page)
There are quite a few ride systems out there that Disney pioneered and then other companies copied but changed just enough to avoid patent-infringement issues.
-Rob
I was aware of Xpress (spend a lot of time on RCDB) i just thought it was funny they had two ride systems pictured that are similar to Disney attractions
Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.