cakebaker
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2013
- Messages
- 9,554

In no case shall the number be two, excepting that thou then proceed to three...
In no case shall the number be two, excepting that thou then proceed to three...
But I haven't. Day One at Park One and Day Two at Park Two are inextricably intertwined. By referencing this, I am not changing the subject but instead fleshing out the entire scenario. You cannot have your "awesome day" at one park and ignore its ramifications at a second park. It is you who just refuses to accept this. The whole system works in concert, not in isolated abstract.
That may work but sure seems like work and I wonder how many users would even know to try that.
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Here's what I'd say- It was awful. Our plan was to go to the MK by opening and leave by 11am. We missed riding SDMT because the FP return time was past noon. So we left as planned, went to our resort for a break, ate lunch, swam, let the baby have his nap and went to Epcot at 4 as planned. Soarin was out of fp's and the line was 90 minutes long all evening so we missed that as well. Unfortunately, the return time for TT was too late and we'd miss our dinner ressie so we had to skip that as well.
except that, my understanding of what he is saying, is that it ISN'T two days at two parks, but morning at one and evening at the other. By grabbing morning FP-'s at the first park, there is a better than good chance that the times will be past when he is planning to leave, and by the time he gets to the 2nd park the times will not be available for when he needs - the machines will be past that time.
There is no circumstance by which you would have done what you suggest unless you were prepared to:
- Ride at 4:10 and show up a few minutes late for your ADR
- Skip your ADR
- Eat fast and use your FP at 5:10.
Otherwise, you would have come back at a different time.
That may work but sure seems like work and I wonder how many users would even know to try that.
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Unless one is only planning on a one day trip, then there is always a "day two". And if one is only planning a one day visit, one cannot "hop". If one hops, then one must have a multi-day pass. And if one has a multi-day pass, one must plan on a "day two" at the parks. Eventually, the person in question is going to find themselves at a tiered park, and when that happens, the benefits of FP+ start to shrink.it ISN'T two days at two parks
But I haven't. Day One at Park One and Day Two at Park Two are inextricably intertwined. By referencing this, I am not changing the subject but instead fleshing out the entire scenario. You cannot have your "awesome day" at one park and ignore its ramifications at a second park. It is you who just refuses to accept this. The whole system works in concert, not in isolated abstract.
And now? If you use your FPs for the MK in the morning and go to Epcot at 4:00, what would you expect to be different? Soarin' will be out of FPs. The line will be 90 minutes long. And the same will be true at TT. If you got to the MK by opening under FP-, you could have ridden standby or gotten a FP return time of around 10:30. There is no way under FP- that you could "go to MK by opening" and find all the return times "past noon". Now you are just making stuff up.
And now? If you use your FPs for the MK in the morning and go to Epcot at 4:00, what would you expect to be different? Soarin' will be out of FPs. The line will be 90 minutes long. And the same will be true at TT. If you got to the MK by opening under FP-, you could have ridden standby or gotten a FP return time of around 10:30. There is no way under FP- that you could "go to MK by opening" and find all the return times "past noon". Now you are just making stuff up.
Unless one is only planning on a one day trip, then there is always a "day two". And if one is only planning a one day visit, one cannot "hop". If one hops, then one must have a multi-day pass. And if one has a multi-day pass, one must plan on a "day two" at the parks. Eventually, the person in question is going to find themselves at a tiered park, and when that happens, the benefits of FP+ start to shrink.
I'm confused too, because in her example, she had a FP for 7DMT. So that would preclude here from having FPs at Epcot. And if she had FPs for Epcot, she could have simply ridden 7DMT standby, thus negating the need for the FP whose time has passed. So, yes, this is too confusing.Didn't she get her FP+ for evening at EPCOT?
(Hard to follow along at this point with all the "but buts" trying to prove someone's plan is flawed.)
Unless one is only planning on a one day trip, then there is always a "day two". And if one is only planning a one day visit, one cannot "hop". If one hops, then one must have a multi-day pass. And if one has a multi-day pass, one must plan on a "day two" at the parks. Eventually, the person in question is going to find themselves at a tiered park, and when that happens, the benefits of FP+ start to shrink.
I didn't think so. Could be different. Here is what the ticket page says:They sell single day park hoppers.
Now granted, most people probably are there for multiple days at a time, and thus would have that "day two". But in the specific situation that was asked about / presented, it was not a 2 day park visit, but 2 parks in 1 day.
I've never said that.
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I didn't think so. Could be different. Here is what the ticket page says:
Important Single-Day Ticket Details
1-Day Ticket: Magic Kingdom Park
This ticket provides admission to Magic Kingdom park. It is not valid at EPCOT or Disney's Animal Kingdom park or Disney's Hollywood Studios.
I'm confused too, because in her example, she had a FP for 7DMT. So that would preclude here from having FPs at Epcot. And if she had FPs for Epcot, she could have simply ridden 7DMT standby, thus negating the need for the FP whose time has passed. So, yes, this is too confusing.
Thanks. I think you have distilled it. So FP+ really shines when one buys the more expensive hopping option and bounces around from park to park. I'm just not convinced that this has become the norm. I don't know for sure, but I still think one-park-per-day is still the most used approach. And under that approach, there is a "day two" at a tiered park that has to be contended with. FP+ wins the day when hopping around. FP- wins the day when spending a whole day in a tiered park (assuming that one wants to ride all the rides that build up 70+ minute waits).I think some confusion may come from there being 2 different posters talking about their park days. Poster #1 was scheduling FP around an ADR after having planned to hop to MK in the afternoon (they had the SDMT). Poster #2 was talking about spending the morning in one park and leaving by 11 for another.
Both people were talking about hopping, both find advantages to being able to schedule FP+ for their needs and not rely on the available time or even availability of the FP-. Both were also saying that their specific plans could not be reliably replicated using FP-, even though someone was insisting that it could.