Yeah, and that was exactly my point in citing your review. I think you represent a very common opinion of this year's event.
MAZ said:Fog machines every fifty feet would be WAY better than more pumpkins. They could sell every prop they have and buy nothing but fog for the entire park in my opinion. True creepiness is achieved when I can't see the person walking in front of me! I want to trip and fall over shit because I can't see it. This will never happen. I know. But you guys now know that I really like the effect that extreme fog gives the outdoors at night.
NoStylGia said:Well for them it isn't just ticket prices it would be park wide and with more fast food places around the park and more demand for higher quality attractions, it's hard to find a happy medium in a trash economy. You have to realize this is a business to please but if not that many people show up with money in hand to buy, the park doesn't have any means to please. I don't think this has been a particularly great year for attendance outside of HOS. Beer fest got some people but as a park event, it wasn't that spectacular, just an excuse to sell more booze. I think Illuminights was successful in bringing in numbers, but execution was terrible. It's the same with HOS. The higher ups always have some good ideas for product, but the execution gets tossed when the ideas take too long to put together or are back to back with other events not giving enough time in between to get the done properly or just done completely, leaving the park half ass at best and left that way with no course of finishing the job. It sucks to see especially for pass holders who enjoy coming in for every event, always being left with a feeling of wanting not necessarily more, just a complete idea. I've seen numerous faces in the faculty in and out of the park and I think that's a big problem for them, no one stays long enough to get a good groove going and finding the timing to get things finished in time to open up beautifully. I think HOS has suffered this year from the back to back events happening all over and not giving their staff enough time to recoop. It shows in areas like Axe(less lol) Alley, Side Show Square, and Vampire point. Minimal is done because there is no time to do more, and not enough staff all around. I don't want to come excited opening weekend and be disappointed and to be told oh just come in a few weeks, more will be done. It should be a finished concept and complete look Day One. Unfortunately I think BG is just desperate for revenue.
Nicole said:I never thought I would find myself saying this, but maybe BGW needs to embrace the Mickey's Not So Scary model and leave the Halloween Horror Nights market to KD?
I remember a time when people in Northern Virginia believed that the drive to Williamsburg was worth the effort, because KD's haunt simply wasn't as good as HOS. Clearly, that is no longer the case. In fact, I found many of the houses at SFA's Fright Fest to be scarier than HOS mazes this year (and last, actually).
We have been saying this for a while now: BGW is watering down their event by trying to be all things to all people. Maybe with their demographics it makes more sense to have an entirely family friendly event? Maybe they need to beef up and expand their children's event. They already seem to have the party elements fully operational.
I can't believe I actually just proposed that...
MAZ said:Fog machines every fifty feet would be WAY better than more pumpkins. They could sell every prop they have and buy nothing but fog for the entire park in my opinion. True creepiness is achieved when I can't see the person walking in front of me! I want to trip and fall over shit because I can't see it. This will never happen. I know. But you guys now know that I really like the effect that extreme fog gives the outdoors at night.
The parks had more money for support when Busch owned them but when they sold them off it was only the parks supporting themselves. Without that backing they had to put the money in other places they feel would create more money, e.x. Sea World and Tampa. I do miss those Busch owned days but those days are long gone. Still wish I could have gotten of the AB logo red benches. That would have been a great piece for my sitting area facing the lake.MadridBot said:Busch Gardens seems to be falling into the same pattern it fell into a few years ago. Howl-o-Scream started strong in 1999, but around the late 2000’s it started feeling like it is now. Then in 2011, they hit a huge launch and the event was at its peak in my opinion. Once 2015 came around, everything was starting to slack. The theme was horrible, understaffing was imminent, and the Terror-Torries were lackluster. Hopefully the event picks up once again like Dark Side of The Gardens did. Just want to throw this in. It seems like whenever SeaWorld wants to build something “amazing” they take funds from Busch. It should be the other way around. I feel if Anheuser bought back the parks, we would see HoS skyrocket. If the Busch parks were to separate on their own, the events would most likely be better. I just can’t get at it that SWPE is most likely taking money from Busch instead of funding it.
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