This past fall I still saw plenty of gangs, teens, drop-off and unchaperoned kids in the park after dark despite the new policies. It seemed the chaperone policy was only enforced at the gate, but not within the park. I saw plenty of kids with no adults with them walking around FF after dark. Probably the parents walked their kids in past the gate then split.I don't think many people realize that GAdv essentially served as the big discount option in the 2010s for people living in the region and that JRA and the old regime treated it as such.
GAdv's primary attendance pull post bankruptcy were people that couldn't afford to go anywhere else. Hershey was always very expensive, and those that could afford it ended up going there instead once they saw GAdv start to deteriorate. That said, even at its worst, GAdv could easily outperform every other park operating with the same price point in the region. That's why the park had peak attendance up until COVID, despite the park being lackluster with additions and more importantly upkeep/maintenance.
All of this is why I think Selim raising prices was a good decision. It sounds screwed up, but the parks that are at their best are the ones with a premium pricetag. Think of it like virtual reality. VRs online experience was the best when it had a four figure pricetag. Once cheaper options became available and children started flooding servers and communities, the experience became much worse.
Same thing applies here. Gangs, teens with nowhere else to go, and kids who's parents used the park as a babysitter are no longer in the picture, and as someone who cares for the well being of the park, I think it's a step in the right direction. You can tell that corporate feels the same way just from the chaperone policies they recently implemented. Selim and CF both see potential in the park, and the first step in turning things around was to take out the trash. Now they're doing everything else, and it'll take time. Instead of having the park serve as a budget option, they want it to be the park to visit in the region, period.
GAdv announcing as much as they did for their 50th anniversary wouldn't have happened under JRA and I'll stand by that. What he did with the company, sending new things to each park every year, was a good idea on paper, and perhaps was the best way to pull the company back out of bankruptcy, but it backfired due to having to sacrifice the cost of upkeep and maintenance at alot of parks. The new regime is treating things alot differently. Look at Great Escape now, you could argue it's having a little resurgence and people are taking notice.
I was pessimistic before, but I do have reason now to think that GAdv has a bright future. Dorney doesn't get alot of new coasters or rides but the park looks alot nicer just because it's the way CF does things. The 2026 coaster, and the multi-year expansion focusing on improved guest experiences, lead me to think that GAdv will improve. Hopefully you guys end up being right.
edit: My previous pessimistic views were mainly fueled by years and years of things getting worse. I'm willing to take a clean look at everything and give this new regime a shot.
A suitable replacement that is new would make up for the thrill ride losses, presuming more to come. For example a giga coaster or a the launched equivalent. The Skyway is a very different thing, although in a sense a huge, heavily themed family attraction would make up for it in a modern, promotable way.Replacing Ka is already an impossible task from a PR standpoint. You really can't expect Ka's replacement to also make up for all of these other losses—and I severely doubt that Six Flags leadership would claim anything different.
Reason #1 that you might be wrong: C O P I U M.The more i think, the more i think the entire coaster community is being fooled.
Hear me out, Ka WILL get reimagined.
Reason #1 that you might be wrong: C O P I U M.
Cedar Fair has killed major tentpole rides before, when they decided it was best for the park. Son of Beast, Volcano, both very major and expensive rides that weren't immediately replaced. Ka, on the other hand, IS being replaced with something. They probably don't see it as a major loss, regardless of what the diehard enthusiasts say.
When Falcon's Flight opens, it will create a matching set of records "without a windshield" although depending on what happens with Formula Rossa they could have had 1-2 of those with what they had, maybe TT2 will get them instead. Spitfire there will be getting the world's tallest inversion at 240', although it only goes 79 MPH.Besides height and speed, what records are left?
I don't see any practical way that they could build one that tops Falon Flight without a similar terrain feature. I suppose it's possible that they could claim a record like highest above grade and say that the cliff is cheating but given that both are in the Six Flags family that doesn't seem likely.They also described an experience “taking guests to new heights.”
Its 2 options: Ka Redesign or Mack Tower Spinning Coaster.
Time will tell. Could we be getting the World’s Tallest Coasted again?
Six Flags Qiddiya is only licensing the name Six Flags and isn’t actually owned by the company.I don't see any practical way that they could build one that tops Falon Flight without a similar terrain feature. I suppose it's possible that they could claim a record like highest above grade and say that the cliff is cheating but given that both are in the Six Flags family that doesn't seem likely.
Even if we go by the lower of the two tallest bits, that's still 550ft. That's really damn tall. I'm not sure SF is ready to drop the kind of cash needed to reclaim that record.I don't see any practical way that they could build one that tops Falon Flight without a similar terrain feature. I suppose it's possible that they could claim a record like highest above grade and say that the cliff is cheating but given that both are in the Six Flags family that doesn't seem likely.
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