mickeyfan5534
Well-Known Member
What ticket level are we looking for with the Power Puff Girls coaster?
I would say a D. Something with theming, but nothing too too spectacular.What ticket level are we looking for with the Power Puff Girls coaster?
What ticket level are we looking for with the Power Puff Girls coaster?
Yeah, I'd concur.I would say a D. Something with theming, but nothing too too spectacular.
That sounds totally fine. Can't wait to see it.For the Gravity Falls area, I was thinking there wouldn't be a ride, simply because there's so many other attractions. Maybe a small walkthrough and a shop? Just thought I'd run that by y'all.
Here's my Bob's Burgers concept.
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With Bob's Burgers, I decided to take the show's concept, and turn it into an actual restaurant. Located along a stretch of street just bordering Swim City and the nearby Forest, Bob's Burgers will allow guests to actually step foot inside the eponymous location from the hit TV series and enjoy some good food.
Inside, there are plenty of booths and barstools to sit on. Although the picture above shows the interior of the place during its "Tiki phase" from the show, the interior will look as it normally does on the show. Since the Belcher family takes up residence in an apartment above Bob's Burgers, it seems only apropos that you hear the goings-on upstairs during your time inside--footsteps, talking, etc.
Of course, the menu will be replicated from the show's menu, selling burgers, fries, salads and drinks. In addition, the shop will also sell your traditional Disney counter-service restaurant stuff: chicken, desserts, healthy options, the usual stuff (but no pizza. Remember, Bob's Burger's biggest competitor is Jimmy Pesto's Pizzeria).
Plus, the shop also has its infamous "Burger of the Day". Yes, this real-life Bob's Burgers will sell different themed burgers every day. Usually, these burgers are named using word play. Generally a pun, the name of the burger combines ingredients and/or side dishes with pop culture references. Bob thinks these burgers up himself, although Louise disobediently replaces Bob's burger of the day with her own more dark and inappropriate versions whenever she can get away with it. Examples include "New Bacon-ings" (comes with bacon), "Foot Feta-ish Burger" (comes with feta cheese), the "Totally Rad-ish Burger" (comes with radish), "Take Me Out to the Burger" (comes with peanuts and Cracker Jacks), and "Burger a la Mode" (comes with ice cream). For a more detailed list of examples, click here.
In summary, Bob's Burgers is a truly unique restaurant, bringing out the wacky, yet down-to-earth, tone of Fox's hit TV series.
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And that's it. Do I need to make any alterations or anything? I'd appreciate the feedback.
Thanks so much. I don't think we need anything else worked on. Maybe some general scenery stuff?I volunteer to post the project on Tuesday. I'm working on the Rick and Morty thing, does anything else need worked on?
---TrevorA
This is actually really incredible. Great job. Seriously.So okay, this was supposed to be a Wallace and Gromit flat ride. But then I got to thinking and, well... this was the result.
Wallace and Gromit’s Grand Day Out
Classic attraction reinventions have become more commonplace in recent years, with the Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage and the short lived Luigi’s Flying Tires reintroducing a new generation of guests to more old-fashioned ride systems (submarines and flying saucers, respectively). Well, now the two most iconic stop-motion animated characters in history have been given a chance to bring a bit of old school magic to the modern age: an interpretation of Disneyland’s Rocket to the Moon as only they can tell it.
Guests come across the entrance to this theater attraction on the border between the suburbs and Swim City; next to Hank Hill’s house and across from the Simpson’s residence is a replica of 62 West Wallaby Street, the quaint home of Wallace and Gromit. Parked outside is the Motorbike from the short A Close Shave, and if guests look closely they can see the Anti-Pesto van from The Curse of the Were-Rabbit parked inside the garage. Heading inside the house, guests enter an extended queue on the right that takes them up the stairs, while guests with disabilities are taken to the left to enter a special elevator that bypasses the queue and takes them downstairs to the showroom. Guests who take the stairs are led through the second floor by Wallace’s Room (where you can see the bed tilted up, a nod to The Wrong Trousers) and into Gromit’s room, where they exit out of the open window and onto a set of stairs into the backyard. The backyard is actually an indoor set that serves as a holding room, before guests are led through the back door and into the kitchen, where they watch Wallace deliver a pre-recorded message on a tv placed on the wall.
“Oh, hello there!” says Wallace. “My name is Wallace, and I’m here to deliver a special message for all of you. I bet you’re wondering what’s in store for you today, and believe me I can’t wait until you experience it. For today, my dog Gromit and I will be taking you on a trip to the moon!” Pictures of the moon appear on the tv as Wallace continues. “We have designed a rocket to take us there, and once we arrive we shall begin taste-testing the moon’s surface - as everyone knows, the moon is made of cheese.” The screen cuts back to Wallace. “Of course tea and crackers will be provided, though you’ll all have to provide your own blankets and umbrellas. Now if you’re all set, just exit out of the- I’m sorry, what’s wrong?” An off screen Gromit prompts Wallace with something he’d forgotten to mention. “Of course, my apologies! Once you’ve finished watching this video, a crew member will direct you to the rocket. There you will buckle in by pulling the seat belt from right to left. Be sure to store all carry-on items in the baskets provided under your seats. Please refrain from eating, drinking, smoking, and taking flash pictures while on the rocket. Now, hang on for one moment…” Wallace pulls out a translating device that looks like a bullhorn, and proceeds to repeat the message in Spanish. “All right then. If everyone is ready, then to the moon we go! I’ll see you all on board!”
Guests leave the kitchen and enter a final holding room, the living room. The radio plays calming instrumentals like the ones commonly heard in the Wallace and Gromit shorts, as guests can look around and see blueprints and pictures of the duo’s misadventures. After a few minutes guests are escorted by a cast member partly down the stairs and into one of two basement set rooms, where they step out onto a platform to see a modified replica of the rocket that Wallace and Gromit took to the moon in their first short A Grand Day Out. This one is considerably larger however as to accommodate a larger number of guests than just two, and visitors technically only see the top portion of it as the fake “lower” section is obscured by scaffolding. Guests are then led in through a hatch and instructed to take their seats. The theater guests sit in are similar to those in the old “Rocket to…” theaters, circular and with screens on the ceiling and floor, as well as two smaller screens on the left and right sides. Once guests are seated and have fastened their seat belts, the theater goes dark and Wallace appears on one of the side screens.
“Hello again! We’re just about ready to take off. Just doing a final check, everything seems to be under control.” Wallace sets a timer. “Sixty seconds to blast off. Allotment doors please, Gromit!” Gromit pulls a lever, opening the basement’s ceiling up and displaying the starry sky in the ceiling screen. A faint rumbling is felt in the theater as Wallace and Gromit take their seats, the screen on the left wall showing Gromit and the right showing Wallace. “Five, four, three, two, one, lift off!” says Wallace, as the ship begins to lift. On the floor screen guests see Wallace’s house beneath them, before seeing the cartoon land, the continent, and ultimately the planet shrink beneath them. “Won’t be much longer now!” says Wallace.
After a few moments guests can make out the moon in the ceiling screen, as Wallace speaks again. “All right everyone, there it is! I hope you’re all looking forward to some lovely cheese - I certainly know I am. All right Gromit, adjust angle of thrust. Steady now, easy does it… steady…” Just as Gromit attempts to lower the ship onto the moon’s surface, the ship is hit by an asteroid which causes the seats in the theater to shake slightly. “Oh dear, hang on everyone!” The ship ends up flying down and over the surface, where guests are afforded an up-close glimpse of the moon as Gromit attempts to land. He succeeds, straightening the ship out and landing, but not before passing by what looks like a robot on skis.
“Is everyone all right in there? Okay then, before we let you folks exit let me check the damage.” Wallace is seen exiting the ship and the camera in his screen is switched to a security camera in the ship’s lower portion. Guests see Wallace puttering around in the dark for a brief time while looking for something, before lighting a match and looking around. “Just what I was afraid of, the main thruster has been hit. We’ll have to take off manually when we leave.” The camera points down to a comically large fuse. “Everything else seems to be fine. All right Gromit, open the doors and let the guests out.”
Just as Gromit is about to press the button and let the doors open, the ground begins to shake and a large monster wearing a sweatband and a wrestling championship belt comes running towards the ship. “Oh dear, I think he’s angry!” Wallace remarks. “We have to get out of here, my apologies everyone. Emergency takeoff, Gromit!” Wallace lights the fuse and quickly exits the chamber, entering the control room. “Here we go again!” The ship takes off a second time, as bits of metal fall onto the ground. “It looks like we’re in for a rougher trip this time.” Wallace is right, as the theater shakes slightly more violently. As the moon disappears in the bottom screen, earth appears in the ceiling screen. The ship turns around and manages to safely land back into the basement of 62 West Wallaby street. “Whew! Well, that certainly was a close one. Actually, the chances are about a million to one that we’ll encounter an asteroid like that again, so please come back soon. Goodbye everyone, and thank you for joining us!”
As the show ends, guests exit the theater through a second hatch on the opposite side, and follow a platform that connects to a door that leads from the basement to the side of the house. Guests then leave the house and follow a path leading back onto the land’s main street.
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Seriously, I don't know why it's so hard to find pictures of Wallace and Gromit's house. Though I figured I'd add a little crossover there with Regular Show, because why not. Hope you all like it, and my second attraction (which is indeed a flat ride) will be up tomorrow.
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