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aaronm

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Posts posted by aaronm

  1.  

    1 hour ago, yaark said:

    What if they had scalable pricing, so each time the train leaves with empty seats, it discounts by a dollar and when someone purchases, it resets back to full price $20 (or whatever the charge is now).

    I'm not sure your suggestion is workable, but they'd almost certainly make more money with some sort of dynamic pricing model. If the row isn't occupied 80% of the time the park is charging too much, there's no profit to be made on empty seats!

  2. Some great advice shared already, outside of Disney/Universal I'd recommend adding at least one or two smaller parks. In Tokyo:

    - Yomiuriland has some wonderfully unique attractions (noodle cup rapids is my personal favourite)

    - Tokyo Dome City has the excellent Steel Dolphin

    - Hanayashiki is peak "weird Japan park"

    None of these would necessarily use a full day either.

     

    There's also Fuji-Q with its infamously slow operations, I would try to combine this with a visit to Mount Fuji if you're going to bother. A day trip from Tokyo is possible but personally next time I'll be trying to spend at least one night up there.

     

    Other random parks to consider:

    - Nagashima Spa Land, Japan's answer to Cedar Point

    - Greenland, quite big with a healthy dose of oddball, weird and interesting rides

    - Parque Espana, takes some getting to but well worth the effort. You may even end up as "King of the Parade" (as happened to my friend, hilarious!)

    - Suzuka Circuit, with the famous "scream and it goes faster" coaster

    - Nasu Highland, with a spaghetti bowl of coasters straight out of Rollercoaster Tycoon

  3. 4 hours ago, themagician said:

    This is the parks response to someone’s comment about the lack of open rides

    IMG_3354.jpeg

    Another copy-paste statement trying to deflect how poorly the park is run in the name of “safety” and gaslight their guests into feeling reckless for complaining. Plenty of other theme parks around the world manage to keep the majority of rides open for their guests (including WBMW pre-2020), it’s Movie World that is the outlier. IMO the park deserves every negative review it gets, charging full price when so many attractions are unavailable. I feel terrible for the poor Guest Services staff who are no doubt fielding the same complaints daily at the moment.

    • Like 1
  4. If they need to cut costs, I'd rather the parks closed midweek during the off-peak season rather than have these ridiculously long maintenance periods. VRTP could easily stagger its opening times so at least one park was available each day, for example:

    - Movie World open Thursday-Monday, closed Tue/Wed
    - Sea World open Friday-Tuesday, closed Wed/Thu
    - Wet'n'Wild open Wednesday-Sunday, closed Mon/Tue

  5. 1 hour ago, themagician said:

    when it breaks they don't repare it.

    One thing Disney in particular seem to be building into their rides is a "B mode" - a backup for when a primary effect isn't working. A notable example is the RoTR Kylo Ren animatronic being hidden behind a wall when it's broken, replaced by Kylo appearing "outside" (via some windows/screens) in his ship. So rather than an effect appearing obviously broken the ride still seems relatively complete. Given that VRTP have aspirations to be like Disney, hopefully they're paying attention and incorporate something similar in these new rides, where it makes sense.

  6. Concept art looks good but as often with VRTP projects I'm getting the impression that they're spending money where it won't matter. Projection mapping was cool a decade ago but I question how well it will work in a park that's mostly open in the daytime. Buying a pair of family boomerangs instead of a higher capacity family coaster is an odd choice as well, especially since they'll probably end up only running a single side outside of school holidays.

    Perhaps they just haven't announced it yet, but it seems a missed opportunity to not have a dining outlet in the area as well, or some sort of performance space. I wonder if this area will be like WWF, nicely themed but largely empty except for the queues.

    • Like 2
  7. Aqualoops seems to have fallen out of fashion for waterparks in general. They're a fairly intense ride and can be a 'one and done' for a lot of people. Personally I prefer the old-fashioned speed slides for thrills, less chance of accidentally waterboarding yourself.

    The structure itself is iconic and highly visible from outside the park - if the park wanted to add another big raft slide or two it would be a great spot.

    • Like 1
  8. All signs point to this upending SDSC as the #1 family coaster in the country.

    As an aside, I'd love to see them plus up Steel Taipan one day, plenty of space to add some theming/visual interest beyond the current "gravel carpark with some rocks".

    • Like 3
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