It's been a few years since I've been to WDW, but I remember walking by Small World and the wait time showing something like 60 minutes, but the line did not seem that long so I got on and the wait was less than half what the wait time was showing.
My theory is that wait times work like a stock. During a crowded day, if Space Mountain's wait time was 15 minutes you'd jump right on (buy the stock), but if it was 120 minutes you'd likely hold off (sell the stock). Like a stock, each ride has a point where there are no more buyers, a wait time that doesn't seem worth it to anyone. Once this point is triggered and the buyers evaporate there is a quick selloff in the wait time, too quick in fact for even the wait time to be updated. This creates an opportunity to "buy" a ride at an undervalued wait time.
I'm curious if anyone else has noticed this and done any research on the issue. A way to test this theory would be to somehow obtain the wait time data throughout the day and see if it is cyclical and to see where the peaks are.
My theory is that wait times work like a stock. During a crowded day, if Space Mountain's wait time was 15 minutes you'd jump right on (buy the stock), but if it was 120 minutes you'd likely hold off (sell the stock). Like a stock, each ride has a point where there are no more buyers, a wait time that doesn't seem worth it to anyone. Once this point is triggered and the buyers evaporate there is a quick selloff in the wait time, too quick in fact for even the wait time to be updated. This creates an opportunity to "buy" a ride at an undervalued wait time.
I'm curious if anyone else has noticed this and done any research on the issue. A way to test this theory would be to somehow obtain the wait time data throughout the day and see if it is cyclical and to see where the peaks are.


