Robo
1971 Castle in the Hub: Your lights are on!
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2001
- Messages
- 106,997
Complicated, restrictive, inflexible, confusing. Based on what facts I know now, at least.
I am usually very "let's be positive" about Disney, but the idea of being able, or wanting, to always have to plan/control to this extent is totally crazy and not good to me.
It is actually the complete LOSS of guest "control" that is at the heart of what's being discussed here.
The control that guests have traditionally had was one of choices that could be made at the moment, at the parks, at their pleasure and mood.
Being about to DECIDE what to ride (and/or ride again) based on how their day was progressing.
If little Billy had finally decided, after tackling Barnstormer, he wanted to try Big Thunder or Space Mtn, for the first time.
No problem, grab a FP and have at it .
Deciding this a few weeks or months in advance...
I don't THINK so, Tim.
Conversely, the family made plans to use a precious FP+ choice to
ride Space Mtn. but little Billy decides that he WON'T be doing so,
after he walks 20 feet into the queue.
And, yes, it is complicated.
OUTSTANDINGLY, INTENSELY complicated.
Complicated well beyond anything that Disney has actually been able to keep track of (control of) in the past.
Spitting out a FP ticket is comparatively simple, and it is,
just by its nature, a guest-held hard copy of the "reservation."
Easy for guests and CM's to read the return time. Easy to prove that its a legit "reservation."
But what if something goes just a tiny bit awry?
We've talked about individual ride shut-downs and such causing
a rift in "reservation times" for FP+.
What about higher-in-the-chain computer glitches and failures.
The FP+ computer could lose dozens (or tens of thousands) of FP+ reservations (or access to them,) either for the afternoon, for the day, or scrambles them for an entire month... or quarter year.
There's more, but that's enough to consider for this post.