BuckeyeBama
You are stronger than you think.
- Joined
- May 29, 2013
- Messages
- 7,036
I used to pull 183,349 FP- per day, but the limit of 3/day is okay. 
I agree with everything mentioned already but just wanted to emphasizes the ones the stuck out to us this weekend.
I dislike the new system #1 because the website/apps just don't work so you really can't use it as intended. They absolutely need a reliable system and in park WiFi before they start forcing this on guest. I used the system when it was being tested this fall and just used it again the past weekend at EPCOT and Magic Kingdom. We had SO MANY issues this time. I was able to prebook, but it would randomly split off one of my kids and put them on different rides. In the actual parks, the app wasn't working well either day so you had to find an in-park portal and once you got through the 15-30 minute line the system kept dropping people from my party on the FP reservation. Also, image having to find a portal and wait in line every time you need to make a change b/c the app wasn't working.
#2 I dislike the number of fastpasses that I'm limited to, three is bad enough but for the parks with tiers it's really only one fastpass.
#3 Day of flexibility doesn't really exist if you want to ride the main attractions. Ex: I booked a fastpass for Test Track and the ride went down(all the time at Test Track) before the park even opened and the system automatically changed us to one of the lower tier attractions. I tried to change it to Soarin day of and it wasn't available any time that day. Same thing in Magic Kingdom, Thunder Mountain was down and there was no availability for any of the main attractions (Space, Peter Pan, Jungle, Belle) left for the entire day, this was at 11:00 in the morning.
#4 The system has increased standby waits for rides. They also try and force you on attractions that don't/haven't previously needed fastpass. We waited an hour for Pirates this weekend.
Pirates was always basically a walk on for us as was IASW (which I hear now also has long lines). What have they done?? I am slightly dreading how this summer is going to go. We have not tried the new system, but, I don't like it already. I am afraid that it's going to create longer lines everywhere. I think it was a mistake to change it. The old system, everyone was equal. No extra money to ride favorite rides multiple times.
but alas, if the system works, let's change it!
If Disney starts charging for extra fast passes will it change your resort staying habits?
We stay club level. I do not like the idea of paying to have more fast passes. I do not like the idea of waiting in longer lines (that are long to begin with). I think they will be longer with the new system. Last, I do not like green eggs and ham.
The FP+ is exactly why we are going to Universal and SW this summer and skipping WDW. I find the FP+ system absurd. Disney is expensive enough. For 2 people a 4 day pass is $600+. For that amount I can get 2 Universal annual passes which includes all the discounts for hotels, restaurants and stores! Plus we only stay on site at Universal and the Express Pass perk for resorts guests beats anything Disney can do. The hotels at Universal are awesome and cheaper. It's a no-brainer for us.![]()
I agree with everything mentioned already but just wanted to emphasizes the ones the stuck out to us this weekend.
I dislike the new system #1 because the website/apps just don't work so you really can't use it as intended. They absolutely need a reliable system and in park WiFi before they start forcing this on guest. I used the system when it was being tested this fall and just used it again the past weekend at EPCOT and Magic Kingdom. We had SO MANY issues this time. I was able to prebook, but it would randomly split off one of my kids and put them on different rides. In the actual parks, the app wasn't working well either day so you had to find an in-park portal and once you got through the 15-30 minute line the system kept dropping people from my party on the FP reservation. Also, image having to find a portal and wait in line every time you need to make a change b/c the app wasn't working.
#2 I dislike the number of fastpasses that I'm limited to, three is bad enough but for the parks with tiers it's really only one fastpass.
#3 Day of flexibility doesn't really exist if you want to ride the main attractions. Ex: I booked a fastpass for Test Track and the ride went down(all the time at Test Track) before the park even opened and the system automatically changed us to one of the lower tier attractions. I tried to change it to Soarin day of and it wasn't available any time that day. Same thing in Magic Kingdom, Thunder Mountain was down and there was no availability for any of the main attractions (Space, Peter Pan, Jungle, Belle) left for the entire day, this was at 11:00 in the morning.
#4 The system has increased standby waits for rides. They also try and force you on attractions that don't/haven't previously needed fastpass. We waited an hour for Pirates this weekend.
In regards to tiering and booking 60 days out, first, no one needs to do the latter, but that would change if tiering were to be abolished. Earlier in this thread there was a discussion about "day of" booking. But forget that. It isn't as if your only options are 60 days out and morning of. No one has reported not being able to book what they want 10, 7, or 2 days ahead of time. At least not yet. So if booking 60 days out is an issue for you, then don't do it. People are treating FP+ as if it is the equivalent of getting a dinner ADR at BoG where you need to be 180+10 days out and still be lucky. But this isn't the case.
Which brings us to tiering. Were it to be abolished, you might very well turn FP+ into a "race" the way it is now for certain ADRs. Do you really want that? Take tiering away at Epcot and 100% of all guests with kids who meet the height requirements will book both Soarin' and TT. All this will accomplish is to ensure that all FPs will be sold out before the park opens which destroys the flexibility and spontaneity that Disney is now marketing. And once people come to terms with the fact that these rides will book full before the park opens, they will push back their booking dates to 7 days in advance, and then 10 after 7 becomes no good, and then 20, then 30 until you get to 60. So if you eliminate tiering, you will be guaranteeing that you have to book 60 days out. The old "TSM Death March" will become the "TSM Race To The Computer" 60 days in advance. So while you may not like tiering and the 60 day window, you have to realize that you have to have one or the other. And adding more FPs is not the solution because that would simply guarantee that every guest will book Soarin', TT and TSM before they leave from home ensuring that those FPs sell out in advance. Disney does not want FP+ to turn into a competitive sport the way ADRs for CRT, BoG and others have become. I understand the angst here, but some of the proposed fixes being discussed here would ruin the very purpose (according to Disney) of the new system. I don't like FP+, but I do recognize that if it is to exist, it has to have certain of the features that many hate or else it will become either a race to the computers on your 60th day, or a race to the kiosks on the day of arrival. Limiting people to 3 FP+s and tiering the choices helps to keep bookings at a more even pace allowing availability even up to the day of arrival, or perhaps a day or two in advance.
CRT really doesn't cause the angst it used to. We book it on every trip, and honestly I don't worry about doing it first any more. If I decide a month or 2 after our booking window opened that I want to move things around, I'm usually confident I'll find the CRT opening I want. It's been that way since they added a characters for all 3 meals of the day and started seating at all times of day continuously. It's a beautiful thing what added capacity can do.
I agree with what you say about tiering. I know they are telling people they are looking at it, but they wouldn't have added it in the first place if they didn't HAVE to. But here's the interesting part....... MK is not tiered. Yet once the Mine Coaster opens, the scenario you laid out with Epcot is what will happen there. Every guest scheduling FPs for that park will choose that ride. It will be very interesting to watch play out.
I usually just lurk on these but I do not know what park I want to go to 60 or even 30 days out. I have no issue with the digital FP. I don't like the excessive preplanning. If I were in charge they would all be day of or no more than 2 weeks out.
If they would treat FP+ like credits and let me use then like dining credits, I'd be cool with it. If I buy a 4 Day ticket, give me 12 FPs total, and let me use them however I choose.
A lot is being made about "having" to plan 60 days out. So how many people on here have been unable to get a FP for an attraction they wanted when they tried to do so upon a morning arrival in the park? I'm not talking about being unable to get your desired time because we had no choice about the return time with the old system, jut being able to get one at all. And I'm specifying a morning arrival because some FP's would be gone by lunch under the old system.
Do you really have to plan 60 days out under the system at this moment or can you actually walk into a park and snag a FP+ for the attraction you want?
You're right about CRT, but I use that as the most famous example of the "have to set my alarm and hit redial 30 times to get an ADR" scenario. We don't ever want FPs to be like that.
MK is not tiered because there are so many options. Parents are just as likely to use FP+ to bypass a horrid Meet-n-Greet line as they are to ride Space Mountain. But you are right that when the Mine Coaster opens, it will become the FP equivalent of a dinner ADR at BoG. It will be interesting to see how Disney reacts to a ride with no FP availability 20-30 (if not 60) days in advance and SB lines of 150 minutes. :confused
The very first time we ate at CRT it really WAS like that. All slots filled in less than 5 minutes. Synchronize your watch with the clock at the Naval Observatory.... and all of that.
My only point with that is they solved that problem. With more capacity. Not by tweaking their reservation system.
And yes, the Mine Coaster is going to be interesting to watch unfold. If it causes people to be online 60 days out, then they aren't just going to book that ride. They are probably also going to be booking the rest of their rides at 60 days out.

You mean, besides only 3/day, only in 1 park/day, only 1 FP/attraction, no pre-booking FPs for offsite guests, and tiering? Besides those things?
Why not utilize the MBs/kiosks in the parks to act just as FP- did except it could all be paperless? Use GPS type locators on phones to allow access to book rides from phones while you are in the park (or through the MBs themselves at touchpoints at the rides if they are still worried about capacity) within certain windows (just like the old FP- windows)?
This would seem to allow for all kinds of flexibility while still allowing them to save face by using their "wonderful" new technology. It would seem to get rid of the need for rationing and tiering (they didn't need it with FP-, so if you kept the basic parameters the same it would follow that you wouldn't need it with a similar paperless option either).
*Sigh.* I know it's not likely, but a girl can dream, right?
) even with enforced return times. We just had better toned legs from more zig-zagging across the parks to collect more. 
But here's the interesting part....... MK is not tiered. Yet once the Mine Coaster opens, the scenario you laid out with Epcot is what will happen there. Every guest scheduling FPs for that park will choose that ride. It will be very interesting to watch play out.
Once you have used all 3 FP for the day, if there are still more available, there's no reason you shouldn't be able to pick up more at that point. It's a silly limitation. If you've used three already, everyone else has had plenty of time to make their own reservations.
I actually think the limits could leave FPs unused at the end of the day. I really doubt that's what Disney has in mind. So the big question is..... how do they intend to use any "leftovers"?
1) They could sell them.
2) They could use them to incentivize guests to stay at more expensive resorts.
3) They could use them to "surprise and delight" guests.
4) They could just let guests schedule them above their normal 3.
I really think option 4 is looking less and less likely. I think this painful year of testing has been all about adjusting our expectations downward so that when they decide to bestow extras upon us later we will see them as a bonus as opposed to them just giving back what we always had for free.
But mathematically, are there any "leftovers"? Suppose that every person with a 4:00-5:00 return time fails to return for that ride. But every person with a 5:00-6:00 return time does return on schedule. If Disney concluded that the unused FPs were "leftovers, (and it could not reach that conclusion until 5:01), and it decided to redistribute those FPs for the 5:00-6:00 (or 6:00-7:00) time slots, it would bog down those times with extra people. I suppose if FPs are not distributed for the final hour of park operation, they could squeeze the extras in there. But many people won't stay that late, and crowd levels in the last hour of operation are usually such that FPs aren't necessary. Bottom line....if you took every unused FP from 9:00am-4:00pm and redistributed them for use between 4:00pm and park closing, you might end up with huge FP lines in the final hours of operation. At present, we don't know how many unused FPs we are talking about, so we can't really draw any conclusions as to if, or how they should be re-used.