I agree--are you SURE you want Deluxe dining? Have you done it before? In order to be worth while financially, you basically have to be on vacation with the sole goal of eating. You have to have ADRs pretty much 3x a day which means your entire day, every day is running from one reservation to the next. The regular
DDP is ONE reservation meal a day. This means for the rest of the day you can just relax. Deluxe is a good thing if you are going on a vacation focused on the food (sorta like going on a cruise, i guess) but if you have big plans to do a lot in the parks, I think Deluxe would just be a stress.
But that's just my opinion. Everyone has different views/experiences. If you've done it before and know you like it, go for it. But if you've never done it before, I really think regular DDP is MORE than enough food.
I'm not the biggest fan of the dining plans in general. And I agree that the regular DDP is more than enough food.
But I don't think that's a realistic evaluation of the DxDP. The DxDP is quite cost-effective if you want more TS meals, more food, or simply higher quality.
You can get great value out of the DxDP without much greater time commitment than the regular DDP.
You definitely do not need to eat 3 sitdown meals per day -- Many people who use the DxDP simply do 2 meals per day, with 1 of them being a 2-credit.
And by doing a signature meal, you aren't really getting more food than the regular DDP (just the addition of an appetizer), you are simply getting higher quality food and/or entertainment.
Compare the time commitment and amount of food in this example of DDP versus DxDP:
Breakfast -- DDP -- use snack credits at resort food court. About 20 minutes for breakfast.
DxDP -- exact same breakfast (but with more snack credit availability to make it work), 20 minutes.
Lunch -- DDP -- QS -- Say your typical burger & fries, with beverage and dessert. Waiting on line at a crowded park QS location, searching for a table -- total time commitment -- 30-50 minutes.
DxDP -- TS-- Higher quality burger meal, appetizer, dessert -- even someplace like Les Cellier. Not a dramatically greater amount of food, just higher quality, with waiter service, etc. Total time commitment -- 60-90 minutes.
DDP -- dinner at a 1 credit restaurant. Time commitment -- 60-90 minutes. DxDP -- dinner at a signature restaurant. Higher quality. Mostly same amount of food, with the addition of an appetizer. Time commitment -- also 60-90 minutes.
So really, in this pretty typical example -- the total extra time commitment of the DxDP was about 10-60 minutes. At most, an extra hour. Probably more like an extra half hour.
I don't think a half hour transforms a vacation into being about nothing but the food.