wisblue
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 28, 2003
- Messages
- 4,385
OK, it looks like we have been disagreeing about 2 entirely different things and it explains a lot. You're saying you couldn't get the specific times you wanted or they were out after 4. And of course some major rides would have been out by 4.
That's different from saying they ran out too fast.
We are park open to park close people, so never cared what the return times were.
I'm going to put a different perspective on this.
A lot of the discussion, and one of the biggest complaints about FP+, is that you can't get FPs for BOTH Soarin and Test Track. Our experience, which usually came at busy times of the year, was that return times for both Soarin and TT quickly ran to 2 hours out and later. So, if you didn't get your FP for one in the first hour, your return time would not be until after noon, and by the time you could get another FP, they would be all gone for the other one, or the return time would be just before park closing. So, as a practical matter, if you wanted FPs for both at those busy times, you had to be there at park opening and/or plan to be in the park all day or plan to return to the park later in the day to use your FP.
Just this one example, which could be applied and extended to other parks and attractions, highlights how the impact of FP+ on how someone tours depends so heavily on things like time of year and crowds, and someone's approach to the parks, including factors like whether you like to arrive at rope drop, whether you plan to spend all day in one park with no breaks and no park hopping, and whether you like to do certain attractions multiple times in a day or are satisfied doing favorite attractions once a day or once a trip.
There has never been a question that FP+ puts a crimp in the style of people who like to spend all day in one park and used paper FPs to its maximum potential to do attractions, maybe including repeats. But, I also don't think that there is any question that FP+ works better for people who have always followed the rope drop, break, second park approach to a day at WDW. And to me that advantage is especially apparent when the parks are most crowded. When you factor in all combinations and permutations of crowd sizes and touring preferences, it shouldn't be surprising that there are widely varying opinions and experiences on this subject. Some guests feel like they have to lower expectations for a WDW trip, while others feel like their experiences have been improved.
In this case, I consider myself lucky that we are in the group that benefit from the new system. Things don't always work out that way.
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and we would get fastpasses for Soarin' and walk over and ride Test Track. Soarin's return time would usually be between 10 and 11 so we would ride it as soon as the window opened and then we would head over to World Showcase to eat an early lunch. After that we would leisurely stroll to the exit leaving for several hours until the cooler evening hours. We rarely bothered with park hopping but that would work just as well.