I haven't been in years - going in May, hopefully - but I'd take all of the negativity with a grain of salt.
First, why do you think the parks are slammed full? That's people voting with their feet.
Second, there's a reason they call it "the good old days" - everyone remembers the past fondly. But back in the "good old days" people queued for hours to see Country Bear Jamboree (really). Now, rides and attractions are so superior to CBJ that it sits empty all day. How much of the great "new" stuff would you give up to go back? Would you axe Rise of the Resistance and Cosmic Rewind to get paper fastpass? What about all of Animal Kingdom? Sure, much has been lost over the years, but other things have been gained. There is always a push and pull, give and take, grow and contract. The parks will go through down times and up times, but all and all, the last 20 years have show stunning growth and amazing new things.
Third, as for "money grubbing," eh... hasn't it always been that way? I mean, we can complain about too much short-term thinking or prioritizing quick profits over long-term brand building, but I think you're fooling yourself if you think Disney has been anything other than a money making machine from day one.
Every effort is going to seem controversial in some way. But, in fact, there's a very good argument that
Genie+ is actually consumer friendly from a pricing perspective. Think of it this way - go back to paper fastpass. Then imagine that Disney offered discounted tickets to skip the fastpass. A lot of folks would have loved that option.
This is that.
They could have just increased
ticket prices across the board and made the same revenue. Arguably they should have to keep park numbers more reasonable. But the current model gives you the chance to opt in or not. Two tiers of ticket prices, one including more stuff than the other. We have tiers in hotels, food, etc. If you see my post history, you'll see that I'm 100% about keeping the "we're all in the same boat" vibe in the parks, but I don't think it's crazy (annoying, but not crazy) to offer people the chance to pick their experience with a better experience costing more.
And honestly, it'd be commercial malpractice for Disney to be absolutely overwhelmed with visitors and *not* charge more. In a way, they have to. Half of the posts on here complain about Disney costing too much and the other half about there being too many people in the parks. That some of us here are reconsidering our
Disney vacations because we're getting priced out is not a bug, it's a feature. (And I say that as a person who goes roughly every 5 years and absolutely cannot afford to stay on site, even in the cheapest rooms.)
Finally, I've been on this board for 20 years (!!) and if I were to pick the single most popular theme of conversation in every one of those 20 years it has been "Disney is going to hell, the magic is gone." Not saying we can't have complaints, and perhaps I'll come back saying the same after my trip in May, but I'm cautiously optimistic that Disney is still Disney - a bit rougher on this edge, a bit nicer on this other edge - but essentially the same for-profit, money-interested, amazing spectacle creating, magic-inducing company it has always been.
I guess I'll soon find out....