TrainsOfDisney
Well-Known Member
It’ll be nice until lightning lane starts!
And it is on a fundamental level. The tickets have included the rides for 30 years…there’s no ambiguity there as the prices are 4-5x as much now…Well, that’s frightening.
I’ve waited over 30 minutes several times In Jeffys vaunted fastpass +…see 2017:2019Good to know.
People like you who would be in front with a FP illustrate exactly why eliminating FP+ will make standby waits go down - you'll never be in line competing for time against anyone else for any e-ticket built within the last 20 years.
Nailed it. 1000% correct.They want to evaluate the money numbers right before the holiday rush and see how high that Lightning Lane price will be able to go.
See everyone is different. I think conceptually a virtual queue is a great idea for a very high demand ride - would be terrible for every ride in a park, but a select few across property is reasonable. Personally, I think asking anyone to wait in a line for 3+ hours is completely ridiculous and there simply will be rides where demand would result in that.
The biggest question to me is how to execute a virtual queue. Any system is going to have winners and losers but I think something could be done that feels less like a lottery and is more "fair" (or at least would tend to spread the wealth to more different guests as opposed to people being able to get multiple rides). I don't pretend to know how to best run such a system, but I think getting rid of VQs altogether is a "throwing the baby out with the bathwater" situation.
Personally, I was furious when Uni opened Hagrid's and the only option was standby (especially when the ride opened hours after the rest of the park so a long line formed before it was even running for the day).
Not to mention, with "all-you-can-eat", you also have to factor in those who will get off their favorite ride and then get right back in line for it.There's no such thing because you're always going to have bottlenecks. If Hollywood Studios had 20 different omnimovers with the capacity of Haunted Mansion, they still only have one Rise of the Resistance and that's what everyone wants to ride.
Disney has a minor "total capacity" problem. They have a gigantic "distribution of demand" problem.
Well, I think if they were to replace things like the movie previews and the mermaid and B&TB shows with things people were actually willing to wait for, that would help.There’s no distinction between the two…more capacity would naturally diffuse the crowd…even if one spot was insane
Maybe because of a lack of capacity and never a commitment to make it more than a half day park?Well, I think if they were to replace things like the movie previews and the mermaid and B&TB shows with things people were actually willing to wait for, that would help.
INDY, despite it being hopelessly outdated in terms of excecution, still seems to be able to pack them in but it appears they acomplish that with limited daily shows...
It fits my touring style perfectly, so I'm going to be a big beneficiary in all of this. We're on-site early risers and most of our trips are 8 nights, exactly enough to rope drop the IAS rides one time each during Early Entry. Then we'll probably Genie+ one Magic Kingdom day each trip, and I don't expect I'll end up waiting very long for anything at all.Not to mention, with "all-you-can-eat", you also have to factor in those who will get off their favorite ride and then get right back in line for it.
Less of an issue without FP or FP+ and not going to be a factor with RISE at least for a while but even looking at whole trips, if you go for a week and do the new hotness 4 times while there are people still showing up who have never done it and can't because the single attraction doesn't have enough capacity to even let everyone do it once, you're contributing to that problem.*
*Not to say that I think any one guest has a moral obligation to not spend their time in the parks as they like but to illustrate the point that a single new hot attraction (or even a couple) does not lift a stale AND underbuilt park.
From an opperations standpoint, VQ are problematic though because they do little to help with capacity issues. If you get a VQ and only end up waiting in line 20 minutes for a 20 minute or less attraction, they've only kept you busy for 40 extra minutes with that brand new attraction (which may be the whole reason you're there) and then they've still got most of a full day to try keeping you busy.
I’m frightened because it is a slippery slope. If we will pay $24 for RotR this year, we will pay $30 next year. Then it will expand. Suddenly it is 2030 and you are paying $10 per person to ride Dumbo. And you already paid $200 on your ticket in.You’re “frightened” by how people choose to spend money at a luxury vacation destination? That seems awfully dramatic to me. By that measure, I guess I’m frightened that people are willing to stand in line for 3 hours.
Oh, as a guest, I couldn't agree more but for management, I think they may look at it as "we dumped nearly a billion dollars into this new area with a new attraction and it has now made the park even more difficult to manage because it has drawn more people in than we have the capacity to handle.Sure, but I don't care. I'm not suggesting a VQ on all that many attractions, just the latest and greatest that would other be getting, I dunno, maybe 150 minute waits or longer otherwise. Sure, you lose the operational "benefit" of that massive long occupying the time of a large number of people but a VQ provides for much higher guest experience compared to just waiting in line. I'm looking at it from a consumer standpoint and I just think 3 hour waits for a theme park ride are insane no matter how awesome.
There still needs to be more to do in all the WDW parks and I firmly would support building more stuff (and at least re-adding the shuttered shows/parades). But that stuff isn't going to change the demand for something like Rise. So, the question for me comes down to "do you think it is okay to expect guests to wait in a multi-hour line for a new ride without doing anything about it?" My answer is that it's terrible to allow that to happen.
One of the tragedies of the whole thing is that Galaxy's Edge is loaded with all sorts of neat interactive features that are rendered entirely useless when it's as constantly crowded as it is, which will likely lead to them getting switched off permanently.Oh, as a guest, I couldn't agree more but for management, I think they may look at it as "we dumped nearly a billion dollars into this new area with a new attraction and it has now made the park even more difficult to manage because it has drawn more people in than we have the capacity to handle.
Don't get me wrong - it's entirely a problem of their own creation because they just don't have enough for those crowds to do once they've gotten that new attraction out of the way (or have a VQ and are waiting to do it) but I suspect they learn the wrong lesson from the results of that.
Built for the middle class…not “luxury”You’re “frightened” by how people choose to spend money at a luxury vacation destination? That seems awfully dramatic to me. By that measure, I guess I’m frightened that people are willing to stand in line for 3 hours.
Built for the middle class…not “luxury”
try not to dislocate your shoulder on this pats
I understand what you’re saying, but you can extrapolate that argument to anything. Buying park tickets leads Disney to charge more for them. Paying their resort prices may lead to the imposition of resort fees. Buying DVC leads to less advantageous terms. If people think something has value, they will pay for it.I’m frightened because it is a slippery slope. If we will pay $24 for RotR this year, we will pay $30 next year. Then it will expand. Suddenly it is 2030 and you are paying $10 per person to ride Dumbo. And you already paid $200 on your ticket in.
Anyone paying now is only serving to ensure that we pay even more in the future.
And yet somehow sees less attendance than MK which is the most equipt out of all the Florida parks yet doesn't have anywhere close to the same attraction capacity.This was my recent experience with Disneyland. Despite the holiday weekend crowds, the longest wait I saw for any one ride was 75 minutes for Splash. Most were 45 min or less, with several rides offering a single rider line.
Of course, the key thing being Disneyland has the actual capacity to handle large crowds.
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