Rich T
Well-Known Member
It's got a good Wild Mouse and a well-done shoot-the-targets dark ride.Is Legoland as bad in person as it seems? I want to go there sometime. I gave birth to a Lego enthusiast, and I think he'd love it.

It's got a good Wild Mouse and a well-done shoot-the-targets dark ride.Is Legoland as bad in person as it seems? I want to go there sometime. I gave birth to a Lego enthusiast, and I think he'd love it.
WDW tourists can be really naive and ill-informed. It's absolutely possible there are that many people going through the gates of DHS. It doesn't mean they're having fun, actually getting on any rides or not regretting their travel plans.The comparison between DCA and DHS has seemed extremely suspicious for several years now, ever since the DCA rebuild was completed in 2012. They basically have the same attendance?!? I call BS on that. That seems logistically impossible when you consider that for this 2017 data DHS has five rides; ToT, RnRC, Star Tours, Midway Mania, Great Movie Ride.
That would be like DCA operating daily with only Guardians, Screamin', Soarin' with an extra theater, Midway Mania with an extra track, and Little Mermaid. You'd have to close down DCA's 16 other rides, including E Tickets Racers and Grizzly, and stop doing the DCA parade. You would then need to rely on DCA's remaining theater shows and walk-thru exhibits to soak up the crowds. Even if you cut that attendance by several million per year (which is what I think the real difference is between DCA and DHS attendance), it would kind of explain why DHS has held on to tired old shows like 1989's MuppetVision 3D.
Even the DAK numbers seem a tad suspicious and off, but not quite to the extent of DHS. I'm thinking the reality is something like DCA's numbers here are under-reported and DHS numbers are grossly over-reported. There's even some suspicion in the Magic Kingdom Park vs. Disneyland numbers, with so many rides missing at Magic Kingdom compared to Disneyland's monster roster.
If I remember correctly, Disney wanted to combine Knotts with the Independence hall area across the street into a version of Disney's America. They had an industrial area in the back with Muppet coaster and a boardwalk pier area. There would be a big raft ride and a flight over America. Ghost town and Independence Hall would be the only things that stayed in tack. The Knott's family would never sell to Disney in fear of what they would do to the place.I'm not thrilled about every change Cedar Fair's made to Knott's, but I'm almost afraid to think what today's Disney would do with the property. It's nice to have a park full of real California history and no Disney characters, Star Wars or Superheroes in sight for a change of pace.
Theme parks generally aren't something I enjoy or think about. I'm just not interested in spending my day in a hot theme park full of unruly teens and sticky little kids waiting in line for a 90 second thrill on some screetching off-the-shelf ride. In my younger days I couldn't get enough of it, but my interests have changed.
The Knott's family would never sell to Disney in fear of what they would do to the place.
Wonder if they could have transferred Calico Mine Train and Timber Mountain to Frontierland in such a purchase.If I remember correctly, Disney wanted to combine Knotts with the Independence hall area across the street into a version of Disney's America. They had an industrial area in the back with Muppet coaster and a boardwalk pier area. There would be a big raft ride and a flight over America. Ghost town and Independence Hall would be the only things that stayed in tack. The Knott's family would never sell to Disney in fear of what they would do to the place.
The comparison between DCA and DHS has seemed extremely suspicious for several years now, ever since the DCA rebuild was completed in 2012. They basically have the same attendance?!? I call BS on that. That seems logistically impossible when you consider that for this 2017 data DHS has five rides; ToT, RnRC, Star Tours, Midway Mania, Great Movie Ride.
There's even some suspicion in the Magic Kingdom Park vs. Disneyland numbers, with so many rides missing at Magic Kingdom compared to Disneyland's monster roster.
The comparison between DCA and DHS has seemed extremely suspicious for several years now, ever since the DCA rebuild was completed in 2012. They basically have the same attendance?!? I call BS on that. That seems logistically impossible when you consider that for this 2017 data DHS has five rides; ToT, RnRC, Star Tours, Midway Mania, Great Movie Ride.
That would be like DCA operating daily with only Guardians, Screamin', Soarin' with an extra theater, Midway Mania with an extra track, and Little Mermaid. You'd have to close down DCA's 16 other rides, including E Tickets Racers and Grizzly, and stop doing the DCA parade. You would then need to rely on DCA's remaining theater shows and walk-thru exhibits to soak up the crowds. Even if you cut that attendance by several million per year (which is what I think the real difference is between DCA and DHS attendance), it would kind of explain why DHS has held on to tired old shows like 1989's MuppetVision 3D.
Even the DAK numbers seem a tad suspicious and off, but not quite to the extent of DHS. I'm thinking the reality is something like DCA's numbers here are under-reported and DHS numbers are grossly over-reported. There's even some suspicion in the Magic Kingdom Park vs. Disneyland numbers, with so many rides missing at Magic Kingdom compared to Disneyland's monster roster.
The argument that I have heard that makes sense about MK's huge number is that they count hard ticket events as separate admissions. MK has a ton of them each year (Halloween, Christmas, after hours events etc.) which adds a lot to its total.
Like adding IPs everywhere.Like make it better?
Disney established the first click methodology when EPCOT Center opened. Disneyland Resort adopted the Walt Disney World system. How Disney counts is not necessarily how AECOM counts.I had heard that WDW supposedly counts every click into each and every of the four parks. So if a guests enters Magic kingdom in the morning then head over in the evening for Hollywood studios both parks get a click count.
I also remember hearing that Anaheim doesn't do that and only counts the first click. and not a park hopping click.
whether that is true I don't know but if it is that would be the reason why all four WDW parks are able to maintain such large attendance numbers as DHS does.
Anyone in the know of how?
Mine would be in at least the top 7. Maybe 6 and a half.I believe if I had my own theme park it'd be in the top 5
Mine would be in at least the top 7. Maybe 6 and a half.
Mine would be forced to close its doors three weeks before it even opened due to a seedy scandal.Mine would be #1. Globally.
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