It's weird, the forecasts are saying the windiest part of the day is basically from now onwards...Yeah, thankfully all the coasters have opened now as most were down for wind earlier. They definitely need more filler rides like the retro squad that can operate in wind.
I have grasped it, and totally understand that there are people with additional needs that aren't visible or immediately obvious. My post wasn't intended to come across as nasty or misunderstanding of those with needs, it's the numbers that I am questioning.
I also understand it's more analogous to a virtual queue than a fastpass, the implementation is good I think, no issue there. no complaints.
What I am asking is why do there seem to be so many more people using it than in previous years? Long covid is a thing that affects many people in many different ways (it gave me Hayfever, wtf?) so that could be an explanation. I'm also not complaining about it extending my queues per say, but how it affects those who need it. Perhaps I am wrong and nobody is a taking advantage when they shouldn't, but it is noticeably a larger number of people than it was before.
Has Inferno had a support fracture?
View attachment 30444
Today was a bit of an operations disaster. Aside from some hail that (naturally) closed all of the rides for 40 mins, I'm not sure there was a single point where all 6 coasters were open at once, at one point we were down to having just 2 open with constant flat-ride downtime. Hyperia & it's new area is looking fantastic though!
It's in the pull-up after the Zero-G roll. So it's one of the more forceful spots on the ride at least.Is that the first turn out of the station into the volcano?
Honestly, I thought it was already a thing, dynamic pricing has been around for decades at this point, and I'm fairly certain their online prices rise for key events, and have done for years.The owner of theme parks including Alton Towers and Legoland is to make it more costly to visit on a sunny bank holiday than a rainy day midweek.
Merlin Entertainments, which also runs the London Eye and Madam Tussauds, is introducing "dynamic pricing" so prices can respond faster to weather and demand.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68659045
Any guesses to how this will play out?
I know you joke, but they kind of already did... Well bounce backs...I wonder if they'll issue dynamic refunds based on downtime during the day too...
We were there on Saturday and it wasn’t great.Been looking at queue times everyday because got a Towers trip coming up and….. I would be crying if I was on park today…
The owner of theme parks including Alton Towers and Legoland is to make it more costly to visit on a sunny bank holiday than a rainy day midweek.
Merlin Entertainments, which also runs the London Eye and Madam Tussauds, is introducing "dynamic pricing" so prices can respond faster to weather and demand.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68659045
Any guesses to how this will play out?
So not only is it pricing that fluctuates on the day, it’s pricing that’s influenced by A.I. Can’t see this going awry.But the introduction of machine learning will make flexible ticket pricing faster and more detailed.
For example, if a sunny Saturday during the summer holiday turns out to be less busy than expected, the firm could lower ticket prices on the day.
Similarly, if a winter's day unexpectedly turns out to be busy, prices could rise higher than current off-peak prices, even during what is normally considered a cheaper time to visit.
Many of those visiting mid weeks, and getting the best experience, already pay the least, as they're mostly the AP holders. It won't affect us at all. And off peak days are already cheaper than peak days. This AI thing looks to be allowing them to set prices based on criteria other than "Is it a weekend, is it a school holiday?" The weather element will be particularly interesting. We saw last week how much difference a bit of sun can make midweek, even in March. Park was empty some days, and very busy on others. That tiny bit of rain yesterday morning gave us a walk on afternoon.This dynamic pricing creates a situation where those getting the worst experience (Long queues, over crowded park) pay the most whereas those getting the best experience (No/Short queues, quiet park) pay the least.
So to counteract this imbalance of enjoyment, let's make the less busy weekdays the most expensive days and already overcrowded weekends the cheapest. By doing so, everyone gets the least value for their buck. Great idea, comrade!This dynamic pricing creates a situation where those getting the worst experience (Long queues, over crowded park) pay the most whereas those getting the best experience (No/Short queues, quiet park) pay the least.
How far in advance are they going to be surging prices? And how elastic is the demand for a day out? If you've done no planning and turn up to Towers when they've put the prices up, are you going to just drive home or are you going to grumble and pay up? So I think there's more 'cash grab' going on than trying to spread demand.With visitor numbers up 13%. It is entirely possible that this demand based pricing is a genuine attempt to spread the increased visitors out a little more, and improve the experience for all guests, rather than another cash grab.
I agree that they're not blind, but maybe they are a bit deaf. They're measuring KPIs all over the shop, but are they really measuring the right KPIs? I think the overall package is what's letting them down. Capacity and reliability are just one area they need to improve, but they also need to improve outside the rides. TLC and Thorpe sparkle magic are great in principle, but other parks achieve the same in half a closed season as Merlin are in 3 years. Why are they still partnered with a catering company that let an outlet get a 0 food hygiene score?They're not blind to the fact that guest satisfaction is a key factor to their success and growth. What they really need if they wish for visitor numbers to keep improving, is more capacity and better reliability!