I am always a little taken back by these threads. How people can be so negative about Uni, when they are consistently putting out a better product then Disney. Over the past few years Uni has developed great headlining rides, a thriving nightlife area, and an unbelievable new land.
Meanwhile Disney has closed down PI, built a clone ride, and could possibly be planing a mediocre to excellent new land. All the while completely pandering to the under 5 set.
Uni is offering a very competitive product right now.
How can people be so positive about Uni right now when they stagnated for 10 years and hardly added anything until recently.
Their nightlife area is nothing but third parties and they built a new land with exactly one new attraction. :lookaroun
See? It's pretty easy to spin the argument however you want. :wave:
Hyperbole aside, we did add a day to our vacation to check out the new Potterland. My wife is a huge Potter fan and she loved it. It is a visually stunning recreation of the movies. She like the queue for the Forbidden Journey better than the ride itself. It is a great place to immerse yourself in the world.
With that said, FJ is an awesome, groundbreaking attraction: the first time you ride it.
To me and my family, there wasn't much to look at the second and third time. While it technologically smashes anything Disney has done ever, it lacks the depth of most Disney attractions. It is a very unique experience from a ride mechanics point of view and a very average experience from a re-ride ability point of view.
To me it didn't provide enough thrills like a roller coaster to keep me coming back nor did it provide enough depth like a dark ride to keep me coming back either. It is exactly the converse of greater than the sum of its parts. It is less than the sum to me.
The actual Hogsmeade area itself was awesome. The shops are painfully small, but you surprisingly get used to that very quickly. I did wonder how much they lose in retail because of occupancy limits. The merchandise was plentiful, seems to be high quality and a good variety. We spent more on merchandise at Potter than at Disney as a whole simply because we knew it wasn't available everywhere. Disney could learn a thing or two about merchandise restraint from Uni.
Butterbeer is great. The food from the Three Broomsticks is a little worse than average park food and very expensive (slightly higher than comparable Disney fair).
It was a great land. One we will gladly return to in a few years. I hope they expand out and take up the rest of the Lost Continent. It was pretty obvious that it was just sitting there waiting to be converted.
Overall, I foresee that it's made Uni an addition to our vacation every few years now, probably not much more than that. The Uni parks just don't offer the intangibles that we are looking for in our vacations that Disney does.