1st timers .... HELP!!f

DisneyCrazy10

Earning My Ears
Joined
Apr 22, 2010
Messages
13
We love Disney but thought the kids (11 and 8) would enjoy Universal this time around. It's a last minute decision and I don't even know where to begin or what to ask. We will most likely stay at the Double Tree near Universal. Dates are still up in the air but possibly the last week of June.

Here is a little background: We all love thrill rides and wake up early to get to the parks at rope drop. We will have either 2 or 3 days to spend at Universal (probably not have park hopper passes) and 1 day at Sea World.

Any advice on what to do/see at the two Universal parks would be appreciated.

I love planning our Disney trips but I need help getting started planning Universal. If you need more details please let me know.

Thanks in advance.
 
Doubletree charges for parking, so you might want to choose another hotel in the area.

If your kids are adventurous you can see everything.

I would suggest that you purchase an offsite package through www.universalorlando.com so that you also get early entry. It makes a huge difference by allowing you into the Wizarding World of Harrry Potter an hour earlier.

If you can wing it, I really suggest that you stay onsite.
 
We booked an offsite package through Universal's web-site. We are staying at the Holiday Inn Maingate (right near Doubletree)

The package includes early admission to Harry Potter, our tickets as well as a breakfast at the Three broomsticks. It was a great deal.
 
In General
Check out the Universal web site to get a layout of the parks. The Unofficial Guide has an excellent section on Universal as well.

As you mentioned, getting to either park early is helpful. If you want to see Harry Potter read some of the other threads in this forum. From what I understand it's still very crowded and the land is undersized.

You can pretty much do one park per day although Islands of Adventure does not take as much time as Universal. We use the third day for going back to Universal since it's a bigger park. You can buy Express Passes once you enter either park. They are good for one use per ride that accepts them. Harry Potter and Rip Ride Rocket don't take them.

We've never had a touring plan but the last time we went we stayed at Hard Rock Hotel which includes FREE Express Passes, good for multiple times per ride. IMHO, it's worth the extra expense. Also, you can walk to Universal Studios or take a boat to IOA/City Walk.

On the water rides (except Jurassic Park) at IOA you will get totally soaked. There's no way to avoid it unless you wear a poncho, which does work. On all rides you will have to stow bags/purses in the lockers, most of which are free (the water ride ones are not free).

Specifics.
IOA
The Hulk
Spiderman - the best ride in Orlando
Jurassic Park
Harry Potter - Forbidden Journey and Dragon Challenge
Water rides: Popeye and Dudley Doright are a lot of fun.
The shows, Sinbad and Poseidon can be skipped if pressed for time.
I would assume you can completely skip everything in Seuss Landing.
Dr. Doom is a wast of time, it's a poor imitation of Tower of Terror.

I would do them in order as you move around the park. There's no need to dash back and forth.

Universal
Shrek
The Mummy
Jaws
Simpsons
Men in Black
Rip Ride Rocket
Disaster
Shows: The Terminator is excellent. 3-D and live actors. Horror Makeup Show is also fun.
ET is kind of lame. Do it if you have time.
Disaster is fun but, IMHO, not a requirement.

2-3 days is plenty of time to do both parks. But I've never been in June so I am not familiar with the crowds.
 

In General


Specifics.
IOA
The Hulk
Spiderman - the best ride in Orlando
Jurassic Park
Harry Potter - Forbidden Journey and Dragon Challenge
Water rides: Popeye and Dudley Doright are a lot of fun.
The shows, Sinbad and Poseidon can be skipped if pressed for time.
I would assume you can completely skip everything in Seuss Landing.
Dr. Doom is a wast of time, it's a poor imitation of Tower of Terror.

I would do them in order as you move around the park. There's no need to dash back and forth.

Universal
Shrek
The Mummy
Jaws
Simpsons
Men in Black
Rip Ride Rocket
Disaster
Shows: The Terminator is excellent. 3-D and live actors. Horror Makeup Show is also fun.
ET is kind of lame. Do it if you have time.
Disaster is fun but, IMHO, not a requirement.

2-3 days is plenty of time to do both parks. But I've never been in June so I am not familiar with the crowds.

Dr. Doom is very different than Tower of Terror. It is definitely a must do ride for thrill ride lovers. Cat in the Hat is also a must do. I'd also add in ET because it is such a classic. Twister is interesting and worth seeing if you have time. Kids also enjoy the Animal Actors Show.
 
OK, here's my two cents as a mom of 11 and 8 year-olds going in June :goodvibes :

1. Stay onsite. Besides great hotels with great pools, you get Express Access (think unlimited fastpasses) for every ride except Rip, Ride Rockit, Pteranodon Flyers, and Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey. Royal Pacific is the least expensive of the three - we are paying 228 per night for four nights from June 12-16 (rack rate is about $270, but you get a discount if you stay longer). If you have AAA, there is generally a discount, but you have to call.

2. By staying onsite, you get early entry to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter (you can also get this with some off-site packages). Totally worth it - we went last July and it was so great to get in early. Besides being very hot, that area in particular is very crowded.

3. If you stay onsite for one night, you get Express Access for your check-in and your check-out day. You could do Universal Studios on your check-in day, then Islands of Adventure (since you will want to be there early) on your check-out day.

4. Unlimited Express means that if your child wants to ride Flight of the Hippogriff 17 times in a row, you can get in the express line each time if you stay onsite. We rode Cat in the Hat over and over because it was very hot and the queue for Cat in the Hat was freezing - it was our air-conditioned break with no waiting.

What to see (based on my kids, so your mileage may vary):

At IOA:

8-year old loved Hippogriff (much better than Goofy's Barnstormer), all of Seuss Landing (don't avoid One Fish, Two Fish because it looks like Dumbo if your kids think Dumbo isn't cool - OFTF is awesome!), all the water rides

11-year old loved all but Hulk and Dragon Challenge (didn't do those). She especially likes Spiderman and HP and the Forbidden Journey. She likes One Fish Two Fish and Cat in the Hat, so I do disagree with the PP who said to skip Seuss Landing. I find my kids (even my 11-year old) will ride rides at Disney and Universal that might be designed for younger kids and will love them, since they don't have to worry about looking cool. Seuss Landing is one of the best themed lands in Orlando.

At Universal:

Mummy was closed the day we went, and RRR was broken down most of the day. DD11 liked everything else. DD8 liked Jimmy Neutron, Shrek, Woody Woodpecker, ET, the Curious George water play area, Disaster. She liked Jaws ok but didn't really like MIB - she thought the aliens were creepy, but they are really not scary. My DD8 is not that adventurous when it comes to rides.

For Forbidden Journey, you can't take bags on the ride, so I'd either try to go without bags that day or be prepared to take a few minutes to put it in a locker. If your 8 year old won't ride FJ, you can all walk through the line together with the bags, then do child swap at the end so your 11 year-old can ride twice. There is a separate castle tour line as well, but we stayed together and DD11 rode once with DH and once with me.

If you want to do the show at Ollivander's, do that first. The line gets very long and only about 20 people are let in at one time. Only one person gets picked to have a wand choose them - just FYI in case you need to prepare your kids that one or neither of them might get chosen.

I can't stress enough the importance of staying on-site with kids - the perks are way better than on-site perks at Disney. The heat and crowds can make or break a vacation with kids, and the express access allows you to avoid the longest lines and gives you the flexibility to try a ride that you might not want to wait 30-45 minutes for, but you would be willing to try with a 5-10 minute wait. Even if you stay at the Doubletree (or somewhere else) for most of your stay, I'd try to stay on-site at least for one day.
 
Dr. Doom is very different than Tower of Terror. It is definitely a must do ride for thrill ride lovers. Cat in the Hat is also a must do. I'd also add in ET because it is such a classic. Twister is interesting and worth seeing if you have time. Kids also enjoy the Animal Actors Show.

I agree that Dr. Doom is different (but similar) but we did not think it was worth the wait we had at the time and have never ridden again. I forgot about Twister. I would always recommend it at least once.
 
11-year old loved all but Hulk and Dragon Challenge (didn't do those). She especially likes Spiderman and HP and the Forbidden Journey. She likes One Fish Two Fish and Cat in the Hat, so I do disagree with the PP who said to skip Seuss Landing. I find my kids (even my 11-year old) will ride rides at Disney and Universal that might be designed for younger kids and will love them, since they don't have to worry about looking cool. Seuss Landing is one of the best themed lands in Orlando.

I tend to agree with you about Seuss. I only suggested skipping it since the OP said they love thrill rides. Depends what you have time for. We rode Cat in the Hat last time and liked it.
 
In General
On all rides you will have to stow bags/purses in the lockers, most of which are free (the water ride ones are not free).

Not all rides require that you put your stuff in lockers. I know Forbidden Journey, Men in Black and I think the big coasters require it, but I'm pretty sure I kept my bag with me most of the time. I'm sure I am forgetting some rides with lockers, but it is definitely not required at all rides.
 
I tend to agree with you about Seuss. I only suggested skipping it since the OP said they love thrill rides. Depends what you have time for. We rode Cat in the Hat last time and liked it.

Fair enough. :goodvibes I know plenty of 11-year olds who wouldn't ride a Seuss ride (or at least wouldn't admit it), but we all loved Cat in the Hat and One Fish Two Fish, and my 8 year old (who is not a thrill junkie) could have spent all week in Seuss Landing, except for her time on Flight of the Hippogriff. :)
 
Not all rides require that you put your stuff in lockers. I know Forbidden Journey, Men in Black and I think the big coasters require it, but I'm pretty sure I kept my bag with me most of the time. I'm sure I am forgetting some rides with lockers, but it is definitely not required at all rides.

The rides you have to stow your bags are Hulk, Forbidden Journey, Dragon Challenge, Rockit, Mummy, MIB.
 
My kids are coaster lovers, and we spend much more time at IOA than at US. If we were going for 3 days, it would be 2 days at IOA, and only one day at US. I second all the PP about staying onsite. We have stayed onsite every trip, and the extra money to stay at a Universal hotel is so worth it. We drove over for a day at IOA from our Disney hotel one year, and it was truly awful having to wait in the regular lines - we are spoiled by FOTL.
 




















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