Haven't posted on this forum in a long, but just wanted to chime in here.
I think this is a tremendous, aggressive move by Comcast and Universal. In line with Roberts goal of overtaking Disney. Texas is a great opportunity for major theme park lands and this is a great first step. Right now Texas only has SeaWorld in San Antonio and SixFlags in DFW. I am a bit confused by the choice for DFW though. I believe a bit south in the Austin area would be better. Yes there are more people in DFW, but it also gets way colder there than it does in Austin.
Excited to see how this will play out either way.
South of Austin yields you Austin, Houston, San Antonio, DFW. Maybe, just maybe some Louisiana.
DFW yields you all those same places + Oklahoma and Louisiana.
And this is going to be a regional park- not a national destination. While summer and holidays will get massive inflow from those other locations mentioned, the weekdays are going to be made up almost entirely on passholders and locals.
When you exclude summer, weekends and holidays- weekdays are half the year. So that’s crucial.
And DFW metro is 3x larger and growing at a faster (raw number) clip.
So bigger pool for weekdays and a bigger pool for weekend/summer/holidays kind of makes DFW a no brainer compared to basically anywhere in the US. Philly/Virginia area being arguably the best viable alternatives.
Austin? Maybe if a national destination. But regional? Not for this park.
Everything Frisco is doing is higher end. The new PGA course/hotel, The Star (cowboys practice facility), the mall w/ a Kidzania and attached Hyatt regency, and now this.
This isn’t your Arlington or fiesta Texas areas with Fairfield inns and holiday inn expresses.
The aim is solely on more affluent younger families. The ones who will be able to spend 4 nights at the new epic universe hotel or hard rock.
This area checks all the boxes. And those young more affluent families 3-5 hours away have a perfect getaway.