What do you think is revolutionary about 7DMT ?
It is a beautiful defining centerpiece for Fantasyland. The theme is over the top. Hills, valleys, rivers, waterfalls, bridges. It is to the MK what the Matterhorn is to DL. The cars have a unique rocking mechanism. It awesome dark sections which everyone who rides it ends up loving, despite the coaster sections not being particularly thrilling to an adult. It has quick turns, but can be enjoyed by very young kids and their families. The queue is fantastic. It is not a tall eyesore. It blends in perfectly with the Fantasyland theme. If you didn't know better, you'd think Fantasyland was built around it -- it is so well integrated from every viewing direction.
Other than "it's not particularly big on the scale of roller coasters for adults" what is there
not to love about it?
I'm not going to challenge your order one bit, as it is a matter of opinion. I asked the question and you answered it. Fair is fair.
The entire point of this thread is to ask the question, shouldn't/couldn't Disney have done so much more with the money it is spending? We both agree that the "other 4 boat rides are some of the top rides at WDW." Doesn't Disney's game-changing animated classic deserve better treatment, (or at least as good as treatment) as Song of the South?
Yes that is the crux of this thread. I do believe SDMT *is* that classic. Mermaid, well, I'll say, per my listing, it's a mid-grade ride. You'd be hard pressed (I'm guessing) to call it a lowest caliber ride of all... (but if you do, fine) but I'll at least agree that Mermaid is middle of the pack in terms of overall. But that's okay... they built the headliner in SDMT. So with it, you need support rides. Not every ride should have the major cost and maintenance of a SDMT, and adding Mermaid will create midlevel things to do and pull ppl off Small World, Pirates, etc. You do need the balance of a headliner pulling people to the parks / land and then lots of secondary rides that are cheaper to maintain to provide a fuller experience.
I'm sure they could have reallocated some money from their wrist band initiative to give guests a new classic ride.
I look at the spending on the wrist band initiative as an entirely separate budget. They will budget so much for rides, and plan to have the
right number of rides to max out their parks. Not more rides than would pull in more people, and not fewer rides that would leave the parks below capacity - but the right number. Then the budgeting for the MM+ is totally separate. This was a computer system. Like if Disney upgraded its back-end computer system for however much, that would not be
in lieu of rides. Or if they revamped their firewalls / security in light of the Sony thing, that would be out of their security budget. The MM+ is money set aside to further their technology, tracking, marketing, usability, spending, guest experience, and monetizing of fast passes. Totally separate budget.