Pokemon and Mario are definitely the best selling kids games, just a heads up :thumbs:
Appreciate your little heads up, but I said "some"...sure, Mario and Pokemon have been around for quite a while and have sold quite a bit of volume because of it, but that doesn't discount the fact that lots of movie-based games and interactive dance/singing games etc. sell quite a bit and take up a solid portion of video game sales.
It's not how well-known a specific IP is... it's the force behind it. And most of Universal's rides are based on PG-13 films (Terminator is rated R)
I agree with this 100%. However, there is a HUGE difference between a PG-13 movie about robots or monsters and a M-rated game about actually shooting people. I think Fast & Furious is a great example of a PG-13 film that can be translated into a great all-ages ride; despite it's rating, at its core it's about cars that go really fast, and who doesn't love that? Everyone can get on board with that theme. Same with The Lone Ranger--good example of a sucky IP, and a PG-13 rating, yet its Old West aesthetic and cowboys/Indians motif isn't violent or restrictive, and it could make a great family ride.
Call of Duty, on the other hand, is ALL about killing people. It's not about made-up terminators and time-travel, it's about you gunning people down in the most violent way possible. That would be akin to making a ride out of Kill Bill...if the whole point is violence (it's not just a side-effect of the story), then it doesn't work.
I don't see how Call of Duty or Halo would be too inappropriate for a shoot 'em up dark ride. Tone down the gore and make it more about the interactivity and no one will even notice it's been toned down to PG-13.
Lol....please, please tell me you're joking. You honestly think a ride where guests strap in and gun down terrorists is a good idea for a theme park? Really? Remember that Kentucky Fried Panda was cut from Springfield due to political correctness...you cannot honestly tell me that scoring big points with bloody head shots to soldiers would be a good ride concept. C'mon man...
The rides wouldn't have to BE video games specifically... World of Warcraft could be an E-ticket water ride for example. And Legend of Zelda is pretty common knowledge as far as video games go... most people over the age of 25 will know what it is.
First off, I understand that you're not suggesting DisneyQuest, where everything is virtual reality. As to this common knowledge thing, I didn't know who Zelda was before seeing an idea for it a few pages back. Gamers are a subset. Sure, you could make a ride based on an unknown IP, but theme parks today aren't willing to take that chance.