tlmadden73
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2014
- Messages
- 4,714
It's an odd move to "punish" your DDP crowd like this. Take one of the most popular restaurants, and force your DDP crowd to either overpay (with credits) for the meal, or force them to come out of pocket even though they've already ponied up. Do they not want to sell the DDP? Are they simply testing boundries? Or do they know that most wont care, and are fine with it? I would think WDW does well on the DDP. That's why I find this so odd. It doesn't take a lot of math to see how blatant of a waste of your credits this experience would be.
The DDP takes advantage of people who "don't care" what the price is. Once you just "bundle" in dining, the price of each individual meal no longer matters even if you don't get your "$X" a day worth of food in real dollars. I doubt a lot of the DDP users even notice what the price of any given meal is (just like if you just "charge it to your room" you probably notice less what the actual price is).
You'd be surprised how many people out there "don't do the math" for this and all sorts of things.
"Plans" like this is meant to obfuscate the true price and get you to spend more money than you normally would if just spending cash. They can be a "savings" IF and only IF you were planning on using it to its full extent (which most people don't)
Sure -- there are some who do the math AND can take advantage of it (getting more dollar's worth of meals than you spent), but I am sure that is the minority of users.
My sister was planning on getting the dining plan just because it could be conveniently bundled in their package. I told her even if you would save a LITTLE money by getting the plan, just buying meals ala carte gives you the freedom and flexibility to do what you want. She didn't seem to even care to do the math. She just knew she wouldn't have to "worry" about two meals a day.