PiratesMansion
Well-Known Member
Look, I'm all for appreciating WDW's ambiance, something that everyone should do and that does enhance the parks if you actually explore them (particularly World Showcase and Animal Kingdom). But the fact is that all of their parks, and especially Epcot, DHS, and DAK DO need more rides. Just looking at the most egregious example, one of those parks is 33 years old with about nine attractions and stage shows that have never been updated, some of which are older than I am. That's sad no matter how you slice it.
As explained by other posters in other threads, at Disneyland the monorail is treated as an attraction and is operated by park cast members. Additionally, it is listed, and has always been listed, as an attraction. At WDW the monorail is considered transportation and operated by transportation cast members. That's why it counts in CA but not in FL. Tokyo's serves a similar function as FL's and has similarly never been counted as an attraction, so it makes no sense to count the Florida monorails.
Parks aren't all about rides, but that is why most people come, and higher overall ride capacity in a park is beneficial for everyone. A theme park complex with four theme parks and a theme park complex with two theme parks should not have nearly as comparable of a ride count as they do. It's embarrassing to Florida and contributes to making those parks unpleasant experiences.
I'll be fair to Florida by advocating for them to add more rides and attractions, not by excusing their lack of attraction investment and adding in questionable other things to inflate the ride count.
As explained by other posters in other threads, at Disneyland the monorail is treated as an attraction and is operated by park cast members. Additionally, it is listed, and has always been listed, as an attraction. At WDW the monorail is considered transportation and operated by transportation cast members. That's why it counts in CA but not in FL. Tokyo's serves a similar function as FL's and has similarly never been counted as an attraction, so it makes no sense to count the Florida monorails.
Parks aren't all about rides, but that is why most people come, and higher overall ride capacity in a park is beneficial for everyone. A theme park complex with four theme parks and a theme park complex with two theme parks should not have nearly as comparable of a ride count as they do. It's embarrassing to Florida and contributes to making those parks unpleasant experiences.
I'll be fair to Florida by advocating for them to add more rides and attractions, not by excusing their lack of attraction investment and adding in questionable other things to inflate the ride count.