wisblue
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 28, 2003
- Messages
- 4,383
One huge fallacy that I see in the discussion about what will happen in the future is lumping all of the parks together as if they will all have the same patterns.
Most significantly, the MK should be affected dramatically less than the other parks because it has a lot more and a much greater variety of desirable attractions than the other parks. Therefore, there will not be the same demand for any one attraction like there is for TSMM and Soarin.
I am skeptical that even TSMM or Soarin will be booked for FP+ 60 days out because there simply aren't that many people who are willing and able to make their plans that far in advance, no matter how many notices they get. A lot of people are just chronic procrastinators, like the people who file their tax returns on April 15 even though they have a big refund coming. You also have to remember that not everyone who attends a park even cares to go on all of the headliner attractions, especially the higher speed rides.
I am that much more skeptical that anything at MK will be booked that far in advance. There are a significant percentage of guests who have no interest in the mountains, and a significant number who have much less or no interest in the character greetings or dark rides. I know of families with smaller children who spend almost their entire day at MK on character greetings. Therefore, even if everyone planning to go to the MK on a given day tried to book their FP+ reservations at the same time, not everyone would be competing for the same things. Disney can also manipulate the end result by how they allocate FP+ and with tiering, if needed.
I am also not going to get worked up about the reports of long lines to get into the FP lines. First of all, these reports seem to be inconsistent at best, making me wonder if these lines come and go based on one person or group causing a holdup, and whether people are exaggerating the impact to support whatever conclusion they want to reach. Even if there are longer lines to get through the first checkpoint, that doesn't necessarily mean a longer wait to get on the ride because the FP line has always had some backup when it reaches the merge point with the standby line.
Maybe more importantly, while everyone is focusing on the technology aspects of this test, I think it's safe to assume that Disney is also working on the physical efficiency of moving guests through the lines.
We will see.
Most significantly, the MK should be affected dramatically less than the other parks because it has a lot more and a much greater variety of desirable attractions than the other parks. Therefore, there will not be the same demand for any one attraction like there is for TSMM and Soarin.
I am skeptical that even TSMM or Soarin will be booked for FP+ 60 days out because there simply aren't that many people who are willing and able to make their plans that far in advance, no matter how many notices they get. A lot of people are just chronic procrastinators, like the people who file their tax returns on April 15 even though they have a big refund coming. You also have to remember that not everyone who attends a park even cares to go on all of the headliner attractions, especially the higher speed rides.
I am that much more skeptical that anything at MK will be booked that far in advance. There are a significant percentage of guests who have no interest in the mountains, and a significant number who have much less or no interest in the character greetings or dark rides. I know of families with smaller children who spend almost their entire day at MK on character greetings. Therefore, even if everyone planning to go to the MK on a given day tried to book their FP+ reservations at the same time, not everyone would be competing for the same things. Disney can also manipulate the end result by how they allocate FP+ and with tiering, if needed.
I am also not going to get worked up about the reports of long lines to get into the FP lines. First of all, these reports seem to be inconsistent at best, making me wonder if these lines come and go based on one person or group causing a holdup, and whether people are exaggerating the impact to support whatever conclusion they want to reach. Even if there are longer lines to get through the first checkpoint, that doesn't necessarily mean a longer wait to get on the ride because the FP line has always had some backup when it reaches the merge point with the standby line.
Maybe more importantly, while everyone is focusing on the technology aspects of this test, I think it's safe to assume that Disney is also working on the physical efficiency of moving guests through the lines.
We will see.