I think I need to spend more time researching. With WDW having been there so much I can visualize everything. I need to look closer at maps to help me visualize and understand where everything is located and best way to get around walking vs. monorail, location of rides and restaurants, etc.
I am planning several aspects: San Diego (pre cruise), Cruise excursions, trip up coast to LA (post cruise), Disneyland, LA and surrounding. All of which I am not familiar.
Thank you!
Getting around the resort is pretty straightforward, and walking is almost always the best way to get around.
From the DL Hotel, you'll go through security and enter Downtown Disney. You can then either choose to board the Monorail (as noted, more of a ride than transportation, and it will drop you off in Tomorrowland; not a good rope drop option) or walk the length of DTD to arrive at the park gates. They face each other, and when arriving from DTD, DL will be on your right and DCA will be on your left.
At DLR, being there at park opening is much more important than at WDW-the parks typically open at 8 AM (with early entry at 7:30 in one park), and unlike WDW, the parks don't get REALLY crowded until 11 AM or so. You can get more done in that first three hours than the rest of the day, so make sure you use those early morning hours.
If you only have two days, I would skip table service restaurants. DLR has a lot of excellent counter service options, with much more variety than WDW. That said, three days is definitely better if at all possible. DL Park alone could fill two days.
Know what to skip on limited time. The GE attractions, any attraction involving a film, TLM, TSMM, and MMRR, more or less (to my understanding, haven't done the WDW MMRR) are basically the same as their WDW counterparts. Everything else is different, sometimes a little bit, sometimes by quite a lot.
I like starting my DL days in Fantasyland. There are a ton of attractions there, almost none of which have Genie, and you can do them very quickly if you're there first thing. As with WDW, it's quite difficult to get PPF without a line (and no Genie here), so consider skipping it, especially if the line looks prohibitive.
Radiator Springs Racers: the Single Rider Line is a lifesaver here. Otherwise you're waiting an eternity in standby or paying for an Individual
Lightning Lane.
LA day(s): strategically locate your activities so as to minimize the amount of driving needed. Use Waze or some other directional app that takes present traffic levels into account. People like to make driving in LA sound like the worst driving experience imaginable, and while it's busy, if you've driven in Atlanta or Orlando, you've probably experienced worse than LA, IME.