itchin2go
When life gives you lemons, make lemonade!
- Joined
- May 8, 2007
- Messages
- 3,375
I get in a car and drive 1200 miles each way with a 2 yr old and I want him to be able to ride SDMT too. Just having to get up early and drive 45 minutes sounds like heaven to me. Guess it's all a matter of one's perspective, isn't it?
That has absolutely nothing to do with whether the new system is fair ... or fairer than the old one.
I can only imagine how impossible legacy fp's would be to get as popular as this ride seems to be.
And yet, with legacy FP, each person going to WDW on any given day would have exactly the same chance at getting that FP as the next guy.
Popularity is just a distraction. The fact remains that if I book a 4 day trip at a Disney resort, I don't have the same chance at that FP for SDMT as another guest booking for 14 nights. And the 14 night guest doesn't have the same chance as the 20 night guest. And the offsite guest who links their tickets to MDE at 30 days doesn't have as good of a chance as the 4 night guy. And the one who plans their trip at 14 days out doesn't have as good of a chance as the 30 day offsite guy. How much clearer can this be?
Real life example: Even in its early days, I (whether I stayed offsite or onsite), I never had a bit of trouble pulling a FP for Toy Story. We had 3 trips since TSMM opened, and I pulled a FP for it every trip. Now, offsite guests trying to book at 30 days are having trouble booking FPs for Toy Story. I feel like that's pretty close to comparing apples to apples, and it's clear, there's no level playing field.