Wondering if any CM's can give insight on this.
I am 100% convinced that the "Wait Time From This Point" signs are almost always exaggerated.
For example, Mission:Space will say "45 Min" regardless of whether the line is outside the door or only filling half of the inside queue. My recent "30 Min" single rider wait actually took less than 10.
We already know that the Haunted Mansion and Tower of Terror put "13 Min" up even when the ride is a walk-on.
I've never actually stood in line for "Living With the Land", but I highly doubt people are waiting 60 minutes for the boat ride. But it sure is a good gimmick to get people to pick up a FastPass and kill time in the food court.
My guess is that the other attractions do it for the psychological factor. More people will pick up FastPasses if the line seems to long--- those that choose to wait will be pleasantly surprised when they're out of the attraction 15 minutes earlier than planned.
I don't mind that Disney does this. But it doesn't make sense now that they're using automated wait time counters (those white plastic cards that are swiped as select guests enter the queue, and swiped again when they board the attraction)
I am 100% convinced that the "Wait Time From This Point" signs are almost always exaggerated.
For example, Mission:Space will say "45 Min" regardless of whether the line is outside the door or only filling half of the inside queue. My recent "30 Min" single rider wait actually took less than 10.
We already know that the Haunted Mansion and Tower of Terror put "13 Min" up even when the ride is a walk-on.
I've never actually stood in line for "Living With the Land", but I highly doubt people are waiting 60 minutes for the boat ride. But it sure is a good gimmick to get people to pick up a FastPass and kill time in the food court.
My guess is that the other attractions do it for the psychological factor. More people will pick up FastPasses if the line seems to long--- those that choose to wait will be pleasantly surprised when they're out of the attraction 15 minutes earlier than planned.
I don't mind that Disney does this. But it doesn't make sense now that they're using automated wait time counters (those white plastic cards that are swiped as select guests enter the queue, and swiped again when they board the attraction)