I was chatting with a couple in 2019 and we were talking about Halloween Horror nights. They had mentioned that the night they went they had only done 4 out of the ~10 mazes because they ran out of time since each had a wait of 120 minutes or more. They were talking about buying tickets again and going the next week to see the rest.
I had been able to do all the mazes once, and my favorite two or three twice…. But I had paid ~$400 for VIP tickets instead of the ~$70 for basic tickets.
The couple lived in LA. I live out of state and spent ~$500 on flights, ~$700 on hotel, a few hundred on a rental car, etc. An experience like the couple had likely would have resulted in an end to my annual Halloween holiday to the LA area.
When you do a guest survey and an out of town family mentions they are extremely disappointed in the thousands they spent because they couldn’t do Rise or Spider-Man because of boarding groups or other lock outs you potentially lose that family entirely, as well as all their coworkers they talk to and say “wait a few years, the parks are so crammed you can’t do what you want to do the most.”
Are people that are taking a week off work, traveling hundreds or thousands of miles, spending thousands of dollars for hotel and everything really upset about the change from a free chance to passively wait for an attraction to a paid guarantee to get on the attraction? To me it just doesn’t make sense. Even before this change there were days I missed RSR because the fast passes were all gone. The free system couldn’t get me on. I feel much better about my upcoming (very expensive) trip knowing that I’ll be able to get on Rise, RSR, and any other *must do* attraction, assuming the new system is live by late October.
If you’re semi local or local, and can (and do) go three, four, etc times a year and are upset about this change… why don’t you go on a Tuesday? Or why don’t you go not the weekend of a holiday or some other prime busy time? Right now, on a Sunday, RSR is showing 45 minutes, and likely that is a slight over estimate since lines never seem as bad as Disney says. Falcon is 30 minutes, Indy is 30 minutes, GoTG is 25. Are those standby wait times impossible? You have the flexibility to go during a Halloween party when things are slammed and skip a couple top tier attractions, but be happy with the Halloween food and decorations and stuff… and then return in the middle of January when the park is kinda dead and maybe do RSR twice in a day, Indy a couple times, Falcon, etc all for free in the standby.
I look at a $20 line jump as being much more doable (and acceptable) than a ~$500 minimum to visit again, even just for a quick fly in Friday night, do the park Saturday, and fly out Sunday type of deal.
I also still think this will allow standby lines to go faster. I suspect 75% of the ride capacity will now be working the standby line. With FP/MP I suspect possibly 50% of the ride capacity was going to pass people which was slowing down the standby. Lines might be “long” at 45 to 60 minutes, but likely won’t get crazy at 75-120 minutes except for the busiest holiday weekends. If this happens, they’ve improved the most basic free experience, standby, and allowed an improved experience for those once in a lifetime visits, once every few years, or just dang expensive because of travel visits.
The only guest I see being seriously negatively affected by this is the once a month (or more) type person that is within 45 minutes drive, gets to the park within the first 30 minutes of open, and only visits on a holiday, three day weekend, or Saturday/Sunday.