Karin1984
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2012
- Messages
- 9,375
Different doesn't mean bad. However, if you have a good product with a loyal fanbase, you have to work incredibly hard to surpass the expectations.Having actually eaten in both Remy and Enchante, I'll give you my 2 cents. The cost for both is the same ($125 pp). The level of service is the same (superior). There is one menu in Enchante & 2 to choose from in Remy. The décor is different, but both are upscale French. The food is exceptional. DW and I enjoyed our dinner there last weekend.
To be perfectly honest, I'm BAFFLED by the Wish-hating that's going on. Different isn't necessarily bad. Granted, there were some things on Wish that made DW & I wonder what was going through the designers' collective minds during ship design (stateroom cooler, no drawers jump to mind), but on the whole, we're more than happy to go back. I'm in the minority on the boards here, but having spent time in the adult area on the Wish, we enjoyed it quite a bit.
I get it; everyone has preferences, which is why menus are printed. Some like Vanilla, some like chocolate and some like both. That's completely fine. You do you. However, just because I don't like chocolate doesn't make it bad or 'wrong'. This thread was started based on a video and not in person experience?I'm not understanding all the Hate (yes, I capitalized it on purpose).
I fully expected to be excoriated for expressing my opinion, which I find depressingly amusing given that others who are expressing opinions expect to be supported. Having actually been on the ship, I find it quite nice. It's very different than the Fab Four - love the nickname - but it's nice in it's own right.
If you then go on promoting it as 'this is the best we have ever done', then it hits twice as hard when it doesn't reach the base level, let alone lacks a wow effect.
I understand you cannot market something as 'we did okay', but with the hype they created, the reality doesn't live up to the promise, then the disappointment is worse.
The hate is more disappointment. The fanbase really wanted for Disney to succeed and add an amazing ship to their fleet. They had faith in Disney, or at least wanted to believe Disney would do a magical job.
Last edited: