TDR Day 2: WELCOME TO TOKYO DISNEYSEA
In the morning, we headed down to Guest Services and bought our tickets to Tokyo DisneySea, which were about $62 each. We then hopped on the bus and off we went! We arrived at the gates at 7 am, with park opening scheduled for 8:30 am. There was an announcement that played over and over and over that said “WELCOME TO TOKYO DISNEYSEA” and now it’s ingrained in my brain forever.
For the record, I had heard that Tokyo Disney would open its parks earlier than the listed time. This was NOT true for any morning we were there, at least as far as we could tell. We had the 15-minute early entry passes for staying onsite, and they let us in exactly 15 minutes before the park’s official opening time.
So there we were, lined up for entry, and I realized- there’s no way this is the right entry, there are too many people and how would they turn away those who didn’t have a pass? Turns out we had been waiting in the standard line THE WHOLE TIME. The actual 15 minute early entry was beyond the first security checkpoint to the far right, over by MiraCosta. Thankfully we realized this before our early entry passes would have been useless. (We also realized that there was no reason for us to get there that early before park opening- an hour and a half was way overkill with the 15 minute early entry passes.)
In we went, to be greeted with… a giant globe. This isn’t Universal, right?
If you have never been to DisneySea, and you’re wondering if all those people who talk about the beauty of the park are telling the truth, I can assure you- THEY ARE. DisneySea is GORGEOUS. Absolutely gorgeous. And I say that even though parts around Magellan’s were covered in scaffolding. The attention to detail and theming in this park is unmatched. It’s the best of Pandora, Wizarding World, Batuu, whatever, but on steroids. I joke that this park (and Tokyo
Disneyland) has wrecked me for all other theme parks, but it’s not totally wrong. The bar is risen.
The entry area is Mediterranean Harbor and themed to an Italian port city. There are a lot of shops and some dining places. The “land” stretches around the harbor itself. It kind of reminded me of Portofino at Universal Orlando, but, you know, MORE.
Most people seemed to make a beeline for Soaring, but we got distracted by characters in front of Mediterranean Harbor! Specifically CLARICE. Clarice isn’t much (if at all) in the US parks, so it seemed like a great idea to stop for a photo with her. Other characters were Mickey, Pluto, Goofy, and I think Minnie. The characters don’t stay out for long at all- I think they leave right around the actual park opening time, probably because they’d get swarmed otherwise. It’s also a bit chaotic compared- there are no official lines, so you kind of have to force yourself to the front (without being rude) and try to get the character’s attention (again, without being rude- the character will “skip” you and go elsewhere). While we lost our benefit in getting first on a ride, I’m glad we did this.
We then headed to Soaring, which had about a 30-minute wait at this point. To be honest, I wasn’t super pumped for this because it’s not a totally unique ride, but I do have to admit that the queue and preshow make this worth it. Instead of a terminal, you go through a museum dedicated to aviation. You know the moving portraits in Forbidden Journey at Universal? The preshow has that, but better. The ride is the same as EPCOT, expect you get Tokyo and DisneySea instead of Paris and EPCOT.
