Re: Leviathan - B&M giga coaster for Canada's Wonderland
Okay hold on guys, hold on.
Nitro is dreadful.
Clearly everyone can be bothered to argue since you have been for pages. And that's fine, keep going, it's good for you.
The idea that we haven't ridden it yet and it might ride completely differently is absolutely irrelevant. When a park gets a new ride, one of their main considerations is how will it effect visitor numbers. It is pointless adding a new ride if it doesn't bring in more guests, ultimately that's all you're interested in. There's also the idea of word of mouth spreading the quality and the quality bringing people back, but this is all pointless if you can't get people to come to ride it in the first place.
And this will get people through the gates. It's 300ft, that's the buzzword and that's all it'll take.
What I don't get is how obviously this will destroy behemoth from a marketing perspective. Even if Leviathan is dreadful, it's similarity to Behemoth but size difference will make people prefer Leviathan. The average person is not going to be capable of telling apart the ride experiences. I can guarantee that now.
One thing I will point out is that I think, from a GP perspective, Behemoth and Leviathan are as similar as Magnum and Millenium Force. The only difference is we KNOW for a FACT that because these are both B&M megas, neither will produce decent airtime... But from the point of view of the average visitor, they will look as similar as any park that installs essentially the same ride type just bigger.
So how does Magnum fair with guests? I'm not sure, but I remember queueing too long for it, but longer for Millenium.
Now, CP has insane attendance figures... But so does CW... In fact, it gets more we hear. Perhaps with parks like these, the logic is that to get people to come back you really, really do have to stick your neck out to produce a regional/national record of some kind... And the single best selling marketing trick is scale. Nothing in the coaster world sounds as impressive and sells as well to the public as height.
I honestly do not think a looper would have been of much interest to the vast majority of people who visit CW. Not because they wouldn't enjoy it, but because the marketing wouldn't appeal to them as much as "remember that ride you loved? We built a bigger one!" That's playing it safe.
My concern is what it does for Behemoth. It means that it's life as a marketing tool is cut short years too early and I think that is frankly stupid.