Frank Drackman
V.I.P. Member
Still nothing on the E-ticket at EU?
I head they decided to go with an F - ticket
Still nothing on the E-ticket at EU?
Please no. I don't want Fast and Furious Supercharged 2 to anchor the new park.I head they decided to go with an F - ticket
Sounds like someone doesn't know the real value of FAMILY...Please no. I don't want Fast and Furious Supercharged 2 to anchor the new park.
If it’s an on-rails shooter, than Seven Potters is the way to go. Then you’re (a) Harry protecting your ride against Death Eaters.That would make more sense. I still don’t see that much freedom ending up as anything other than a frustrating mess for the majority of guests tho.
I still don’t see this being anything other than an on rails shooter. It’s the thing that allows for the tech to not be overly stressed as well as giving a fairly standard experience across guest skill levels.
If it’s an on-rails shooter, than Seven Potters is the way to go. Then you’re (a) Harry protecting your ride against Death Eaters.
VR is great, VR attractions are not (at least to this point). I think VR shines in small spaces without access to millions of dollars
Yea, good point. The same way Magic Journeys or Captain EO were the first experience with 3D for people like me when we were kids, a theme park VR attraction could be this generation’s first foray into a real VR headset use. (Not just the cheap ones that use a phone.) Not everyone can afford an oculus. And not everyone has visited a decent boutique experience like The Void.See--I'd argue differently; especially when groups like VOID had high quality, linear-roaming, Virtual Reality experiences with gameplay mechanics in a moving layout.
Depending on the methods the VR is told, I can see this being a major hit for the GP, especially as a free and open to nearly all ages, option.
Yea, good point. The same way Magic Journeys or Captain EO were the first experience with 3D for people like me when we were kids, a theme park VR attraction could be this generation’s first foray into a real VR headset use. (Not just the cheap ones that use a phone.) Not everyone can afford an oculus. And not everyone has visited a decent boutique experience like The Void.
Yeah that's my problem with it. Yes, VR wont feel like the rest of the screen rides in the park, but it would still be better to get a pratical attraction. I'm sure the attraction fit great in Epic Universe with the rest of the park seeming more physical-ride based.Studios is sooo out of balance attraction wise, that they need a practical attraction for expansion, not another ride that's going to feel like most all the other rides in the park. Creative really needs to consider that above all. Even if the VR attraction ends up being a good experience, it will not be a plus for the park. All the screen based attractions in the park are decent to excellent, BUT, there's too many of them, causing the park to have a REDUNDANT feel.
USF is becoming almost unappealing because the options are so drastically similiar. When their food events are becoming the draw....... not good.
That’s my thing, hard to sell it to people. Also for my sake, I know it’s not that drastically different it’ll make my trip to USF. At least I don’t think, but there’s so many things I’d skip at this park and just drink and eat instead while I’m there. They gotta diversify, hopefully whatever replaces Kidzone does that.VR is unique enough that it wouldn't bother me. I think the bigger issue is the similar tropes between the predominantly media-based attractions.
Pretty sure USF is the family park. Pat told me so.To me it feels like:
IOA: Thrills
USF: Tech
UEU: Family
Loosely.
I think the bigger issue is the similar tropes between the predominantly media-based attractions.