wisblue
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 28, 2003
- Messages
- 4,383
I would be inclined to agree with that but then those visitors are the ones most likely to reserve unneeded FP's for the wrong attractions by virtue of their inexperience.
They would only benefit the most if there was some sort of guidance built into the selection process - like perhaps showing average wait times for each choice they are considering using historical data for the date they are looking at and let the user chose which attraction they would like to avoid a long wait for. After all, isn't the entire point of FP to avoid long wait times? Technically, that would be an easy feature for WDW to add, they have all the data.
Then an informed choice could be made by an otherwise uninformed guest and FP would truly be of benefit.
There are plenty of resources out there that would allow infrequent visitors who spend the time doing the research to make FP selections that would save them the most time. Those who don't do that are likely to tour inefficiently by the standards of seasoned guests. That was true with paper FPs and before there were any FPs.
I really don't detect much sympathy on these boards for guests who choose FPs for the "wrong attractions". I sense more regret that some of those guests who wouldn't have made efficient use of the paper FP system are now making FP+ reservations for the most popular attractions, making fewer of them available for themselves.
IMHO, anyone who really cares about the plight of the poor, uninformed first time guest should welcome FP+ as a step toward giving those guests a more even share of the overall FP pool. But, not surprisingly, most people focus on how FP+ affects them directly. And, just to be clear, I'm not saying there's anything wrong with that.