Indy has actual scenes. Dino is just Foliage & Furious: Supercharged.
I agree Indiana Jones is just a more complete experience in its use of music, sets, and pacing. It's that sort of complete experience that elevates it to the level of a classic Disney attraction.For me, Indiana Jones is more theatrical, more like being in the middle of a movie. Dare I say, Rise of the Resistance - esc.
Dinosaur is also good, just not on the same level.
This made me laugh, but again, they're rides with very different purposes, stimulating different aspects or responses from each person.Indy has actual scenes. Dino is just Foliage & Furious: Supercharged.
This made me laugh, but again, they're rides with very different purposes, stimulating different aspects or responses from each person.
Although I've never ridden Indy, I love the movies. I'm sure I'd love the ride too, but it's a different experience. Doesn't make sense to compare the two. Let me ask a slightly different question that I believe is a similar comparison. Do you prefer go-carting, or going to the movies? Kind of the same point. One has to interact with the audience visually and audibly, while the other is usually bland on both fronts, but is a thrill in a different way. Many people randomly will prefer one or the other.
It's a fair question but an odd comparison. I just think from a storytelling standpoint Dino fails. The show is all verbal. There needs to be more visuals. Strip the audio from the attraction and you're left with well, not much. The lack of set decorations and actual scenes make the ride less impactful. Pun intended.This made me laugh, but again, they're rides with very different purposes, stimulating different aspects or responses from each person.
Although I've never ridden Indy, I love the movies. I'm sure I'd love the ride too, but it's a different experience. Doesn't make sense to compare the two. Let me ask a slightly different question that I believe is a similar comparison. Do you prefer go-carting, or going to the movies? Kind of the same point. One has to interact with the audience visually and audibly, while the other is usually bland on both fronts, but is a thrill in a different way. Many people randomly will prefer one or the other.
Hate much? I agree, it's not teacups vs SM, but comparing rides isn't a binary endeavor is it. There are different degrees of comparison. teacups and SM is a much more radical comparison. Dino from my understanding is made to be a much rougher ride which has been one of the complaints in this thread. That's the point. They TRIED to make it a different experience.this is a horrible take. We are not comparing the teacups and space mountain. These two attractions are literally the same ride implementation.
I sincerely appreciate your respectful response. I agree Dino could use a few more visuals, but don't think they should be beautiful scenic sets like Indy. What scene could you add to a jungle at night that would make sense and be as visually stimulating. I don't think that would make sense. That said, like I first said a few posts back, Dino could use a few more jump scares like other dinosaurs attacking the vehicle brightly lit from the dark. Those additional thrills could go a long way.It's a fair question but an odd comparison. I just think from a storytelling standpoint Dino fails. The show is all verbal. There needs to be more visuals. Strip the audio from the attraction and you're left with well, not much. The lack of set decorations and actual scenes make the ride less impactful. Pun intended.
Hate much? I agree, it's not teacups vs SM, but comparing rides isn't a binary endeavor is it. There are different degrees of comparison. teacups and SM is a much more radical comparison.
Dino from my understanding is made to be a much rougher ride which has been one of the complaints in this thread. That's the point. They TRIED to make it a different experience.
NoWhat I think I'm hearing from several if not most respondents to this thread is that they generally don't like Dino the thrill ride and feel it should be replaced with a more tame "dark ride", but have it be less dark.
This only makes sense if you are unaware that Indiana Jones Adventure and Dinosaur use not only the same ride system but have nearly identical track layouts as well. Indiana Jones Adventure also has a much higher height requirement at 46” versus 40” for ”rougher“ Dinosaur.Hate much? I agree, it's not teacups vs SM, but comparing rides isn't a binary endeavor is it. There are different degrees of comparison. teacups and SM is a much more radical comparison. Dino from my understanding is made to be a much rougher ride which has been one of the complaints in this thread. That's the point. They TRIED to make it a different experience.
It’s an original story vs IP. Most fans complain about lack of original rides nowThe queue and pre-show absolutely blow Dinosaur out of the water.
Plus, if you're a fan of the movies, you already feel connected to the story. At Dinosaur it's some random guy you just met trying to steal a dinosaur you've likely never heard of. There's no emotional connection there like there is with Sallah in the pre-show and in-ride audio.
Also I'd agree the lighting is much too dark on dinosaur.
Indiana Jones is superior because:
a) you can see what's going on in the ride,
b) you aren't beat up by the ride,
c) great pre-show elements in the queue,
d) multiple variations in how the ride unfolds, and
e) when you're done, you're in Disneyland.
Your opinion. If California doesn't even have EPCOT or Animal Kingdom, the argument becomes very difficult overall unless you just ignore massive parts of WDW. Not to mention the many hotels, restaurants, water parks, and overall size/scale of the Disney bubble.It absolutely is. Not even close.
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