That's the part that really fascinates me about the Star Wars Land clones shared on each coast. In Florida they are adding Star Wars Land to a half-day park (DHS) that only has 13 attractions currently - 5 of which are rides, and will have 9 rides total once Star Wars Land opens. In California they are adding Star Wars Land to a two-day park (Disneyland) that has 46 attractions currently - 34 of which are rides, and will have 36 rides total once Star Wars Land opens.
DHS in 2019 with Toy Story Land and Star Wars Land
16 Attractions - 9 Rides, 5 are E Tickets (ToT, RnRC, Star Tours, Star Wars #1, Star Wars #2)
Disneyland in 2019 with Star Wars Land
48 Attractions - 36 Rides, 13 are E Tickets (Space Mt., Star Tours, Submarines, Matterhorn Bobselds, Small World, Big Thunder Mt., Indiana Jones Adventure, Jungle Cruise, Pirates, Haunted Mansion, Splash Mt., Star Wars #1, Star Wars #2)
Those two parks couldn't be more different from each other. And yet they are cloning the exact same Star Wars project and its rides for each park to open within a year of each other. How that works in those two very different environments should be quite a study.
I think
@BrianLo's analysis is spot on. Disney has pivoted from a high volume of attractions jumping off from more broadly designed lands, to the Disney Decade model of fewer hyper attractions emanating from more singularly designed areas. As he said, it's very much the Tokyo Disney Sea approach. While Disneyland has dabbled in this approach in the past, most prominently with New Orleans Square, Disneyland has remained a park that prioritized more loosely defined stories and high attraction counts.
Monumental lands have one problem, they can easily reach 1 Billion Dollars per land (cough Star Wars cough Avatar). Does Disney have the guts to build up parks based on this model with extremely steep barriers of entry? Tower of Terror already anchors a similiar land, but it will take much much more to create lasting success.
I'm worried that Disney thinks they signed up for a sprint, when they're in a marathon.
From a purely "feel" perspective, I expect the place to feel bizarre at Disneyland Park. Maybe a bizarre that will make lots of guests happy, but really bizarre nontheless. You can tell me Disneyland's Frontierland governed the design, but it's still going to be weird transitioning from Frontierland and the relatively intimate park to imposing towers and an alien environment.
That's gonna be crazy.
Either way, Disneyland Park will easily leave every other Castle Park in the dust. Disneyland Park's roster will be unsurpassed in numbers and in quality. Built areas will be wide and varied. Upkeep will be among the best in the world. The only unforeseen factor could be crowds. It really could become unbearable.
With rumors of a Frozen E Ticket, I don't see how another castle park ever catches up. (Edit: There's one dark horse... Watch Shanghai closely. They could be interesting.)
Some people may prefer Tokyo Disney Sea or Disney's Animal Kingdom, but in any conversation about "best" Disneyland Park must be muttered.
As for Disney's Hollywood Studios, they still have a long way to go...
Edit: I'll add I am encouraged by a plethora of long term expansion options near Star Wars Experience at DHS. With time, that could be their road to greatness. Though I'm sure someone could have been encouraged by all the expansion pads in World Showcase back in the 1980s. I'll remain
cautiously optimistic.