Before someone calls me a Universal fan boy or something, I have Disney passes, no Universal pass, and haven't been to Universal in 2-3 years. I also live 10 minutes from the Magic Kingdom, and love Disney, but I am very frustrated with their direction the past 6-7 years.
With that said, all you have to do is examine what Disney has done in the past, and what they are currently doing, to see if they are maintaining what made them the premier park in the world.
Look at the 70s, opened Magic Kingdom- enough said there.
80s- Opened Epcot, opened HS, built Thunder Mtn at MK, later opened Maelstrom
90s- This is where it gets good. Opened Animal Kingdom, MK- Splash Mountain and Buzz, Epcot - Test Track, HS - RnR coaster, Fantasmic, Tower of Terror
00- MK- Philharmagic, Epcot- Soarin, Nemo/Turtle Talk, Mission Space, HS- American Idol, Lights Motor Action, Toy Story, AK- Everest, Primeval Whirl, Finding Nemo
10s- MK- SD Mine Train, not sure if any other plans, Epcot- ?, HS- ?, AK- Pandora (2 rides, one of which sounds like a Soarin upgrade).
Do people really not see the difference there? In the 90s, Disney opened 4 of the best theme park rides in existance, RnR coaster, TOT, TT, and Splash. Plus I would add the Safari ride as well. Opened a new park on top of all that. 2000s saw nothing towards the end of the decade, but still saw Mission Space, which even though it wasn't as big as promised, had everyone talking and excited at the time. Also Soarin is a classic, and Everest a good coaster (I personally don't consider it great, but a headliner still).
Maybe Pandora adds a classic to the disney staple. Certainly new fantasy land has left my family underwhelmed to say the least. At the pace Disney builds things, unless we hear of something this year, we probably aren't seeing it until 2020.
IMO, Disney has been too busy expanding other parks and building boats (thanks by the way, love the cruises), and have neglected Orlando in the process. Doing this at the same time Universal is doing a great job of things, is bad timing IMO. My son and I would gladly trade our Disney passes for Universal ones at this point. I'll keep my tables in wonderland card though and continue to enjoy dining around Disney and getting my touch of the Disney experience. I just don't need to fork over 500 a year for rides I have been riding for 20 years.
With that said, all you have to do is examine what Disney has done in the past, and what they are currently doing, to see if they are maintaining what made them the premier park in the world.
Look at the 70s, opened Magic Kingdom- enough said there.
80s- Opened Epcot, opened HS, built Thunder Mtn at MK, later opened Maelstrom
90s- This is where it gets good. Opened Animal Kingdom, MK- Splash Mountain and Buzz, Epcot - Test Track, HS - RnR coaster, Fantasmic, Tower of Terror
00- MK- Philharmagic, Epcot- Soarin, Nemo/Turtle Talk, Mission Space, HS- American Idol, Lights Motor Action, Toy Story, AK- Everest, Primeval Whirl, Finding Nemo
10s- MK- SD Mine Train, not sure if any other plans, Epcot- ?, HS- ?, AK- Pandora (2 rides, one of which sounds like a Soarin upgrade).
Do people really not see the difference there? In the 90s, Disney opened 4 of the best theme park rides in existance, RnR coaster, TOT, TT, and Splash. Plus I would add the Safari ride as well. Opened a new park on top of all that. 2000s saw nothing towards the end of the decade, but still saw Mission Space, which even though it wasn't as big as promised, had everyone talking and excited at the time. Also Soarin is a classic, and Everest a good coaster (I personally don't consider it great, but a headliner still).
Maybe Pandora adds a classic to the disney staple. Certainly new fantasy land has left my family underwhelmed to say the least. At the pace Disney builds things, unless we hear of something this year, we probably aren't seeing it until 2020.
IMO, Disney has been too busy expanding other parks and building boats (thanks by the way, love the cruises), and have neglected Orlando in the process. Doing this at the same time Universal is doing a great job of things, is bad timing IMO. My son and I would gladly trade our Disney passes for Universal ones at this point. I'll keep my tables in wonderland card though and continue to enjoy dining around Disney and getting my touch of the Disney experience. I just don't need to fork over 500 a year for rides I have been riding for 20 years.




