It was the IBM Pavilion.Thank you for that info about moving guests vertically through a display at the 1964 Worlds Fair! I'm interested to search out more about that. Do you know which pavilion it was in?
It was the IBM Pavilion.Thank you for that info about moving guests vertically through a display at the 1964 Worlds Fair! I'm interested to search out more about that. Do you know which pavilion it was in?
Curious to know if @marni1971 believes the new attractions in Pandora and Pandora itself are game changers.
I'm going to probably get a lot of flack but no, I don't believe the attractions are. The built environment however is a site to behold and some of the best themed immersion built yet. The land itself hasn't changed the game but certainly kept the bar raised.
Of course I'll withhold a proper review - should anyone be interested - until I've visited in person.
Horizons had multiple scenarios. If you shut your eyes when choosing it was random!What about the random drop sequences at ToT?? You never get the same experience twice. This has carried over to Star Tours, although the combinations there are limited.
I'm going June 8th, so I'm excited to see it. I'll be there 10 days or so, so I'm hoping to ride them several times.I'm going to probably get a lot of flack but no, I don't believe the attractions are. The built environment however is a site to behold and some of the best themed immersion built yet. The land itself hasn't changed the game but certainly kept the bar raised.
Of course I'll withhold a proper review - should anyone be interested - until I've visited in person.
Single attraction game changers?
Forbidden Journey
Spider-Man
Twilight Zone Tower of Terror
Indiana Jones and the Temple of the Forbidden Eye
Star Tours
Universe of Energy
Spaceship Earth
Big Thundermountain Railroad
Pirates of the Caribbean
Disney also venturing into personalizing things guests encounter on their way into and as they ride attractions also considered as game changers. Right now theyve dabbled in minor name placement and recognition, with more to come. More things that are built in the future where guests are personally immersed within the ride itself ( possibly as a character ) with multiple outcomes will be thrilling.
E.T. at Universal has been using a version of personalization for many years. I'm actually surprised that other rides didn't adopt this technology.
As an adult, I absolutely agree. When I was younger I thought it was amazing that ET knew my name!I love that ride, but hate the personalization. It feels to forced.
That is correct for years and years now. But, to be honest, the end result, to me at least, was not really worth the effort to achieve. Ask a name, type it in a computer, generate a card to give to the Team Member where they manually load it into the system at that end and it says goodbye to you. It would definitely be more impressive now if it were to just magically happen without the manual input. Which is what one of the things that the new Disney system was supposed to generate, however, everyone put on their tinfoil hats and decided that big brother was tracking them and didn't want that. We won't tell them that big bro is watching anyway even without that little perk.E.T. at Universal has also been using a version of personalization for many years. I'm actually surprised that other rides didn't adopt this technology.
Fully themed rollercoaster from the queue start to the exit. Matterhorn gets an honourable mention due to the pressurised tubular steel tracks and block controls but the original hole in the middle knocked it down a pegHey @marni1971! I see BTMR on the list. I love it, but what was the game changing aspect? There had been runaway mine trains before? Could you educate me on how BTMR changed the game?
What about the random drop sequences at ToT?? You never get the same experience twice. This has carried over to Star Tours, although the combinations there are limited.
I'd say some of the tech inside the one animatronic is game changing? It will impact all that will follow it. That said, I'm not sure of the added tech inside.I'm going to probably get a lot of flack but no, I don't believe the attractions are. The built environment however is a site to behold and some of the best themed immersion built yet. The land itself hasn't changed the game but certainly kept the bar raised.
Of course I'll withhold a proper review - should anyone be interested - until I've visited in person.
But was it a game changer?The autonomous travelling theatre was a revelation.
Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.