2. Will this mean people have to change the way they are touring? The earlier you could make your fourth FP+ choice, the better chance you have at getting a worthwhile choice. So will it be better to make all your FP choices for before midday so you can then make your fourth and fifth choices earlier. It will also mean the earlier you can make your fourth FP+ for, the sooner you can make your fifth FP+ and so on, meaning more FP+ times.
It will change things for
some people. There cannot be a universal, wholesale change in the way everyone books their FPs, because not everyone will be able to get the coveted "early times" (assuming that it turns out that early is better. More on that below.) Only a small percentage of people will be able to get the early times, as they are allocated and finite. So before the change, people might worry about FPs for a popular ride running out, period. In the future, people will worry about the early times running out. Since there are far fewer early FPs than there are total FPs, that means more people worrying over a more limited commodity. More angst and frustration. Instead of a Rope Drop where people run to get FPs early in the day, we will now see a "Window Drop" where people stalk their computers at midnight 60+ days out. This was already happening to a degree. (See Elsa and Ana). Now, it is assured. That is, again, if it turns out that earlier is better.
Which is why this board will prove to be so helpful, and yes, the seemingly endless debates about the merits of FP+ really is a discussion in strategy, and here is where the payoff is. Right now, many people are assuming that early is better so that you can re-open your window for booking more FPs. But the devil is in the details, and first-hand reports here will be critical. If a FP+ commando books FPs for 8:00, 9:00 and 10:00, and uses their third FP at 10:01, and hits up a kiosk at 10:07 and reports back that there weren't any good options left to book at that time, then the "get 'em early" strategy will have failed, and we would all be better off shooting for late-morning to afternoon, leaving the early RD hours the way they were. (Of course, in the busiest times, the early times are still going to get booked up by people who make last minute choices because that is all they will have left to choose from.) I can definitely see that at 2 of the 4 parks, (E and DHS) rushing to use up your FPs so that you can open up your booking window again is going to be pretty futile. Do you
really think that a TSM FP is going to be available at 10:30? And if it is, but the return time is 7:10 p.m., then grabbing that FP will lock you out of a possible 5th, 6th or 7th FP for the remainder of the day. Unless they reinstate the
"return time or two hours, which ever comes first" rule, and instead stick to the
"once you've used your FP, you can then get another one" rule, the odds of being able to use more than 4 FPs in a day at 2 of the 4 parks seems pretty slim to me. People seem to think that the "best" strategy is to book 9:00, 10:00 and 11:00 at Epcot, and then at 11:10, grab another Fast Pass for TT, use it, then book another for Soarin' and use it, then..... Never going to happen. Your 4th FP will not be usable, if at all, until late in the day so you will be stuck at 4 (at best). Remember, that if the conventional wisdom is to book early times, what do you think is going to be left when it comes time for you to grab your 4th FP?
My predicition is that for all parks other than the MK, people are going to come back here and report that booking early didn't really work because they weren't able to book any additional meaningful FPs (which Disney already knows, so they have thrown us an inedible bone), and that riding SB at RD followed by FPs later in the morning/afternoon is still the better strategy. And once these reports filter back here, the angst level will go down and people will realize that stressing and setting alarm clocks to book early FPs is useless strategy. (At the MK, I can still see that as an advantage due to the number and diversity of experiences that people will want to book).