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Is Walt Disney World Trying to Be Like Universal Orlando Resort?

Look, Universal Orlando Resort and Walt Disney World are always in competition. Universal constructed a new amusement facility in Central Florida specifically for this reason. After a shaky few, well, decades, they finally struck gold with The Wizarding World of Harry Potter. Since then, the battle between the two corporations is no longer one-sided.

While The Walt Disney Company has a huge advantage in terms of attendance, Universal has closed the gap from an advantage of 11.7 million visitors in 2009 to 10.9 million in 2015. More importantly, Universal is way ahead in terms of recent growth. Most of the Walt Disney World gates have stagnated in attendance, while Universal Studios Florida and Islands of Adventure have increased 73% and 90%, respectively. Clearly, Universal is doing a lot right, but what specifically are they doing better than Disney? Here’s a list of four ways that Universal is beating Disney at its own game.

More new attractions

In 2014, the ballyhooed addition to Magic Kingdom arrived. Seven Dwarfs Mine Train was the anchor piece to New Fantasyland, the most important construction at Walt Disney World in the 21st century up until that point. Since then, the Walt Disney World complex has added exactly zero new rides. Yes, that will change once Pandora arrives in a few weeks. Disney’s total will update to…three new rides since the start of 2014.

Contrast that total to Universal Orlando Resort. 2017 brought Race through New York Starring Jimmy Fallon just a year after Skull Island: Reign of Kong, a major thrill ride, opened at the resort. Most importantly, Diagon Alley became a linchpin section of Universal Studios Florida in 2014. It features arguably the best attraction in Florida right now, Harry Potter and the Escape from Gringotts. Universal also designed the utterly brilliant Hogwarts Express, a means of transportation between the two Universal Orlando Resort  gates that also stands on its own as a Harry Potter attraction. 

Going back a bit more, we have Transformers: The Ride and a new expansion of Springfield including the wildly underrated Kang & Kodos’ Twirl ‘n’ Hurl. We even know that 2018 will bring the introduction of Fast & Furious: Supercharged, an attraction based on the popular movie franchise. In short, Universal is adding and adding and adding. Meanwhile, Walt Disney World remained frighteningly static for the body of a decade.

At Magic Kingdom, the ONLY 21st century additions are Mickey’s PhilharMagic (2003), Stitch’s Great Escape (2004), Monsters, Inc. Laugh Floor (2007), Enchanted Tales with Belle (2012) and the aforementioned Seven Dwarfs Mine Train.  That’s not even the worst offender. At Epcot, almost ten years passed between the introductions of Gran Fiesta Tour starring the Three Caballeros and Frozen Ever After. It was trapped in time. To their credit, Disney has at least acknowledged the problem with their upcoming expansions at Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom, but they’re still lagging far behind Universal right now in terms of proactive enhancements.

Open-Minded theming

What else did you notice about the list above? Every Disney addition I mentioned for Epcot and Magic Kingdom involved a Disney intellectual property. Now contrast that with Universal, which added a Fox franchise (The Simpsons), a DreamWorks/Paramount Pictures product (Transformers), and banked their hopes and dreams on a Warner Bros. Pictures franchise (Harry Potter). 

Universal execs aren’t afraid to try new things. They aren’t locked into any single library when choosing attraction themes. When they have a concept they believe in, they’re daring enough to make a move to acquire the rights. Disney hasn’t been like that, and the proof is this is also the explanation for Universal’s ascension.

JK Rowling originally negotiated with Disney to bring Harry Potter to the Happiest Place on Earth. Disney execs ultimately declined, maintaining that Rowling wanted too much control over her IPs. Whether the irony was lost on these execs is up for debate. What’s irrefutable is that Disney’s loss became Universal’s otherworldly gain. They gave Rowling whatever she wanted in order to sign a contract, and then they turned her vivid imagination into a real themed land. Based on the popularity of the original Potterland, they also mirrored it in Hollywood and then built her another one in Orlando.

None of this success would have happened if Universal had stuck to their own properties. Their best internal option at the time would have been a Jason Bourne attraction. Their willingness to look elsewhere for the next big thing continues to pay dividends to this day. In the spring of 2015, I speculated that videogames would become the next big thing in themed lands. Only a couple of weeks later, Universal announced that Nintendoland would become a staple of all their parks in America and Japan. They continue to unearth new avenues for unprecedented theme park experiences while Disney focuses on its library almost exclusively, with Avatar being the only major exception right now.

Express Pass

Whether we call this the FastPass or Universal Express, the concept is still the same. A theme park tourist enjoys the special benefits of walking to the front of the line, thereby skipping the regular wait. Someone who employs this express system should get to ride a lot more attractions, and that’s true of both iterations. Universal’s is far better, though.

Disney introduced the FastPass to gain more control over crowds. With it, they can predict daily lines better. To maintain that control, they don’t give guests complete autonomy over the system. A hard limit in the system prevents visitors from stacking more than three FastPasses prior to the day of admission. Similarly, the best rides at some gates are in tiers, preventing guests from booking rides like Soarin’ and Test Track on the same day.

Universal’s system has no such restrictions. Any attraction available on Universal Express is accessible. You simply show your pass, and you gain entrance near the front of the line. It’s also better than Disney’s version in this capacity. Disney’s FastPass queue is sometimes quite long, particularly at attractions like Kilimanjaro Safaris.

At Universal, anyone with an Express Pass will wait less than 10 minutes for anything, even on the most crowded park days. The better version of Universal Express, the unlimited one, is free to guests staying onsite. And it gives such visitors free run over both Universal gates. With this pass, you can ride anything you want as many times as you want. The closest Disney analog is the VIP Tour, and it costs hundreds of dollars per hour. You can buy the Universal Express Unlimited for about $90 per person per day.

The reality is that Universal’s better about front-of-line passes than Disney because that’s how Disney wants it. They have chosen to create several tiers of waiting in line. The regular lines are for virtually everyone. The FastPass lines are to improve throughput. VIP Tours are an upsell with a massive profit margin. There’s even a tier above VIP. Celebrities can skip the lines entirely in order to avoid creating crowd chaos. Universal simply wants the guests who stay onsite or pay the $90 fee to receive an optimal guest experience. Until Disney chooses to compete, Universal will ALWAYS win this category.

The Wizarding World of Harry Potter

Even though I’ve mentioned new rides and better theming as Universal advantages, those statements still aren’t large enough to encompass the greatness of The Wizarding World of Harry Potter. This one expansion by Universal has singlehandedly changed the way that all major theme park operators view their industry.

By acquiring this huge franchise, Universal fundamentally changed the fortunes of Universal Orlando Resort. It became a destination vacation spot due to the shared love pop culture fans have for the collective works of JK Rowling. They built a themed land that even Walt Disney would appreciate, one that feels more immersive than anyone else on the planet today.

While Disney execs will never admit it, their acquisition of the Avatar license was a direct response to Potterland. Then, they recognized that Avatar wasn’t popular enough. So, Disney doubled down on the premise by buying Star Wars and the rest of Lucasfilm in 2012. Disney is now constructing two entire worlds similar to The Wizarding World of Harry Potter, and that tells you the whole story. Disney wasn’t formerly in the business of imitating competitors. Over the past decade, Universal has become the leader in innovation thanks in large part to Muggles who love to fantasize that magic is real.