It occurred to me, after staring at maps of Hong Kong Disneyland and Shanghai Disneyland as well as a bunch of armchair Imagineering park designs, that poor Frontierland gets the shaft WAY too often.
Now, I understand that the Chinese may not have any particular interest in the American Wild West, and that even Americans themselves have long since lost their obsession with cowboys and coonskin caps. That's all fair. But I still feel like Frontierland brings something to the table that the other lands can't as much - a connection to a historical reality. Frontierland, as well as its adjunct lands like New Orleans Square and Liberty Square, provides a grounding, a sense of something real beyond the illusion that can be connected to and explored. Without Frontierland (or an equivalent), everything starts to feel like a cartoon - fake, weightless, maybe even a little cold and cynical.
I know not everyone feels this way, but I really enjoy exploring lands like World Showcase, Animal Kingdom's Africa, New Orleans Square and Liberty Square because of the illusion that I'm connecting to something real - that I can really discover something there (which is also why inserting Frozen so heavily into Norway feels like such a violation).
So it's not that Shanghai Disneyland needs a Frontierland exactly, but I think it does need whatever the Chinese equivalent might be - Dynastyland, or some such. Something to connect the park to a historical reality, and then add layers of fantasy on top
But imagine you were tasked with designing a Magic Kingdom clone for a new resort, but told you only had the budget for four of the original five lands. Which would you ax? I admit to not having a good answer to that question, because I feel like they're all needed and provide an important balance. What do you think?
Now, I understand that the Chinese may not have any particular interest in the American Wild West, and that even Americans themselves have long since lost their obsession with cowboys and coonskin caps. That's all fair. But I still feel like Frontierland brings something to the table that the other lands can't as much - a connection to a historical reality. Frontierland, as well as its adjunct lands like New Orleans Square and Liberty Square, provides a grounding, a sense of something real beyond the illusion that can be connected to and explored. Without Frontierland (or an equivalent), everything starts to feel like a cartoon - fake, weightless, maybe even a little cold and cynical.
I know not everyone feels this way, but I really enjoy exploring lands like World Showcase, Animal Kingdom's Africa, New Orleans Square and Liberty Square because of the illusion that I'm connecting to something real - that I can really discover something there (which is also why inserting Frozen so heavily into Norway feels like such a violation).
So it's not that Shanghai Disneyland needs a Frontierland exactly, but I think it does need whatever the Chinese equivalent might be - Dynastyland, or some such. Something to connect the park to a historical reality, and then add layers of fantasy on top
But imagine you were tasked with designing a Magic Kingdom clone for a new resort, but told you only had the budget for four of the original five lands. Which would you ax? I admit to not having a good answer to that question, because I feel like they're all needed and provide an important balance. What do you think?