Cmdr_Crimson
Well-Known Member
That's not a question you want answered.
That's not a question you want answered.
Let me beat my joke to death in peace, thank you!
My apologize, I forgot I made that post.You already established this a few posts up...No reason for a double post...
I'd say when all four parks become all day parks.
For Epcot specifically, if/when Future World is restored, although that may never happen since corporations aren't as eager to sponsor attractions as they were in 1982. Only SSE, Test Track, and Living With the Land (just one ride in The Land, not the whole pavilion) still have sponsors.
Ahh the days of characters wandering the parksIn my opinion 1992/ 1993 was the high water mark for the Magic Kingdom and Epcot Center and original hotels.
Main Street USA was not a strip mall selling the same exact merchandise from shop to shop.
The Walt Disney Story, Penny Arcade and House of Magic were open for busines$.
Costumed characters were a wonderful surprise rather than to be lined up for and expected.
The monorails were almost new and pretty much everybody got a seat. (Yes kids... there were once back to back benches in the standing area and carpet too!) You could stand if you wanted to see something but it wasn't forced herding.
The new Tomorrowland was on the verge of opening.
Open were:
-20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
-Both Skyways
-The Keelboats
-Mr.Toads Wild Ride
-Adventureland Veranda
-Horizons
-World of Motion
-You could go to City Hall and get your free tickets for a Diamond Horseshoe Revue performance
-Orac1 still MC'd the WEDway
-Classic attractions were not shortened or politically corrected
-You could hear the Barker birds of Adventureland squawking. Both outside the Tropical Serenade and the Pirates.
-Buff, Max and Melvin of the CBJ could be found chit-chatting on the wall in the Mile-Long Bar.
-The Main Street Hub was alive with trees and a million sparkling and twinkling lights.
Epcot was fully intact and knew what it was as a theme park, unlike today and Figment used to be male. (at least merchandise wise and Dreamfinder was there with Figment.
Mostly all attractions were open. Not seasonally or on reduced hours or reduced elements or dumbed down.
Magic Kingdom used to be open until between 10 and midnight more often than not.
Once you drove onto WDW property you would be advised to turn your AM radio station on to 810 or something like that and hear Jack Wagner give daily updates of hours, shows, etc....
Simpler times but the magic sold itself in my opinion.
-Both Skyways
Any year between '89 and '94, but I feel like '92-'94 were particularly great.I was recently looking at pictures, and videos of Disney World back in the 80's, 90's, and early 2000's and I wondered when people thought Disney World was in it's prime. I have been every two years since 2005 (and once this year), but I can't seem to decide when I liked WDW the most.
I love WDW right now, but there's so much construction going on, and crowds are insane. I miss 2007-2013, as those trips were some of my all time favorites. Obviously I haven't been to the parks before 2005, so I can't judge if those years were better then now. What do you guys think? What was the best year to visit WDW and why?
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