I love thrill rides. I live for roller coasters, the faster and twistier and upside-downier the better. But spinning makes me nauseous. I don't like small enclosed spaces. I was warned many, many times while in line for Mission:Space in May, and in addition I read about it for many months before riding it. I didn't barf on the ride but I might have if it was one or two minutes longer. I felt dizzy for about another hour or so, and a few hours later had a "flashback" while on the stupid hydrolater at Living Seas!

Even with all of this, I'm glad I rode it, and will do it again when I go back in about two years -- I'm pretty sure I'll feel better by then.
I rode it with my 63 year old father-in-law. He won't go on Splash Mountain or Big Thunder Mountain Railroad because they seem too wild to him. He wasn't thrilled about Goofy's Barnstormer but went on it with my 5 year old, then complained about it afterward. He LOVED Mission:Space. No dizziness, no nausea. He couldn't figure out why I didn't feel well, and made fun of me the rest of the trip. He even refused to believe it was spinning and we experienced G-forces -- he thought it was all special effects and a big psych out.
Also, my 73 year old father rode it last year. In between chemotherapy cycles. He loved it, too, and had ZERO problems.
You can also try to do the math. I'm TOTALLY guessing at numbers here, so please don't jump on me if my estimates are totally off. Let's say 800 people an hour ride it. 10 hours a day, that makes 8000 people a day. Let's say it's been open, what 3 years? 365 days a year times 3 years is 1095 days. 1095 (days it's been open) times 8000 (riders per day) equals 8,765,000. Over EIGHT MILLION RIDERS. One death associated with it (not even that the ride caused it, just that a death occurred in close proximity and time). One out of eight million tells me there's no design flaw with the ride. Let's say one out of every hundred riders is a child the size and age of that poor boy who died. That would mean 80,000 kids his size and age rode it before him. One out of 80,000 still tells me there's nothing inherently dangerous about the ride itself.
In other words ... GO FOR IT!!!
-- Eric
