Why does someone like you even come to a message board? Honestly? You can't find anywhere in your "real life" to spread your sunshine?
People are trying to figure out theme park strategies here. Maybe you should find something else to do.
It's not WW III and we're not trying to solve world hunger here. What my post offered was perspective. It's a THEME PARK. Go. Enjoy. Ride what you can, and don't ride what you can't.
It's impossible to develop a
strategy when you don't know how many people are in their army, and what amount of time standing in line is acceptable for them.
As for the comments regarding programs like Ridemax, it's going to be interesting to see how this affects them. Their whole strategy is heavily dependent on using FPs outside the window (I believe.) so it will be interesting to see how they retain their value.
Look. I'll confess. Maybe we're a little spoiled. We go down as a family 3-4 times/year. I go a lot more than that. People are getting all bent out of shape out of something they absolutely have no control over other than to vote with their pocketbooks if they don't like it. Nobody makes anybody go, but if you do go, you essentially agree to play by Disney's rules in Disney's parks, and these are the new enforced rules.
Sure. You can tell people to go ride big-ticket rides during fireworks and parades. Those are
great strategies, but they were 3 weeks ago too.
I recognize that for many families, WDW is a
once in a lifetime thing. Go. Enjoy the ambience. Enjoy the atmosphere. Enjoy the hustle and bussel of it all.
That's what WDW is all about. Enjoy the story. You can't possibly see it all and do it all in a week or even two. I've been hundreds of times and I haven't seen it all or done it all. You can, and will enjoy it a lot more if you don't pressure yourself into these "I have to this and that." boxes people tend to artificially place themselves in.
I talk to a lot of people that go to Disney and plan their trips down to the minute, and are so disappointed when they return home tired, frustrated, and swearing they'll never go again because there's just too much to do and no way to get it all done. They're exausted from the wear and tear of their vacations. I don't think that's what Walt intended. I could have told every one of them that the strategy they chose would have led to that end result they obtained before they even left home. I did in many cases. It's a pretty easy result to predict.
WDW is about the essence of being there. It's about slowing down to smell the roses in the rose garden. And watching the smile on your daughter's face when she sees Cinderella's Wishing Well for the first time. Most people never even slow down enough to even
find these things. Most people are in such a rush to get things done and to check them off their proverbial (or literal, as the case may be) lists, that they miss the essential WDW.
It's the story.
It's the theming.
It's the color.
It's the smells.
It's the atmosphere.
It's the
magic that
is Disney.
Forgive the Cliche, but I encourage you to not get so lost in the forest that you miss the beauty of the trees.
If you're walking around and your kid's in the stroller at 11:00pm crying because he or she is exausted and tired and you're still going commando, you missed the whole point. Therein lies the tragedy. Not in the fact that the FP system didn't afford you an opportunity to ride Space Mountain at 9:30 so you could hurry up, and not have to miss Wishes while you hustled all the way across town to catch one more ride on Splash Mountain.
Relax. You're on vacation. And you're in for the
experience of a lifetime. It's all about a crescent moon over Cinderella Castle. It's all about the sparkle in a child's eyes. Don't miss that. That's what you'll never see again and what you'll never forget, not the score you aquired on Toy Story Midway Mania.