TiggerTrigger
a.k.a. HouCuseChickie
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2010
- Messages
- 5,743
I'm really mixed on all of this. We've been going to WDW since the mid 1980s and I remember what it was like before any kind of FP and advanced dining. We were also usually going over spring break or 4th of July, so we were experiencing all of this at peak crowds. We had a blast on those early visits, but we waited in extremely long lines for everything and it wasn't uncommon for us to miss out on dining at some of our must do TS spots, especially in EPCOT. So, when we took our first trip after a long WDW hiatus and experienced it with ADRs and the original FP system, it was like this wave of common sense implementations had occurred during our absence.
Maybe it was because our return trip was our first time with our children, but being able to plan out our days with ADRs and touring plans for FPs vs non-FP attractions was a huge sanity saver. We also felt like we were getting a lot more for our $ since it made us more efficient and productive. Sure, it lacked the spontaneity that some people crave or can handle better, but here we were dining at the places we wanted to eat when we wanted to eat there and experiencing relatively short waits. It was like magic
until FP+ came along.
I like certain aspects of FP+, but after a recent trip to DL during peak of peak crowds (Christmas to New Year's week), I realized that I can do a lot more with the old system. I did miss the convenience of wearing my ticket and FPs in my Magic Band and I missed not having hard to get FPs booked ahead of time so I wasn't having to 'run' at rope drop, but I think the lag time between pulling FPs in the old system (vs burning through your first 3 FP+s) enables you to get FPs for more high demand rides at DLR and ultimately ride more during the day. The only park at WDW that handles multiple FPs beyond your first 3 a bit better is MK, but even that starts to dwindle during peak times. We had so many days on our last WDW trip where there were just no decent attractions with FPs and it was either ride things we don't enjoy, repeat things we don't usually repeat or wait 140 minutes for something better. On the flipside, we noticed that people who normally go to DLR at non-peak times were blindsided by the fact that dining reservations are a must have there over the holidays.
I think there may be a good solution by blending the two concepts...i.e. maybe ADRs for popular restaurants and everything during peak times, FP+ for only higher demand attractions, a reevaluation of the tiers, and something to enable people to book more FPs in advance- including repeat attractions or multiple parks. Still, even if they find a way to implement all of this, it will never be a perfect system and we'll find some other issue to find fault if they made these sorts of changes. Plus, if they were to give us all of this...it wouldn't shock me if they also tacked on a fee for something they might call "Premium FP+."
Maybe it was because our return trip was our first time with our children, but being able to plan out our days with ADRs and touring plans for FPs vs non-FP attractions was a huge sanity saver. We also felt like we were getting a lot more for our $ since it made us more efficient and productive. Sure, it lacked the spontaneity that some people crave or can handle better, but here we were dining at the places we wanted to eat when we wanted to eat there and experiencing relatively short waits. It was like magic

I like certain aspects of FP+, but after a recent trip to DL during peak of peak crowds (Christmas to New Year's week), I realized that I can do a lot more with the old system. I did miss the convenience of wearing my ticket and FPs in my Magic Band and I missed not having hard to get FPs booked ahead of time so I wasn't having to 'run' at rope drop, but I think the lag time between pulling FPs in the old system (vs burning through your first 3 FP+s) enables you to get FPs for more high demand rides at DLR and ultimately ride more during the day. The only park at WDW that handles multiple FPs beyond your first 3 a bit better is MK, but even that starts to dwindle during peak times. We had so many days on our last WDW trip where there were just no decent attractions with FPs and it was either ride things we don't enjoy, repeat things we don't usually repeat or wait 140 minutes for something better. On the flipside, we noticed that people who normally go to DLR at non-peak times were blindsided by the fact that dining reservations are a must have there over the holidays.
I think there may be a good solution by blending the two concepts...i.e. maybe ADRs for popular restaurants and everything during peak times, FP+ for only higher demand attractions, a reevaluation of the tiers, and something to enable people to book more FPs in advance- including repeat attractions or multiple parks. Still, even if they find a way to implement all of this, it will never be a perfect system and we'll find some other issue to find fault if they made these sorts of changes. Plus, if they were to give us all of this...it wouldn't shock me if they also tacked on a fee for something they might call "Premium FP+."