Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

DisneyWorl­d: Rise of the Resistance hopefuls have seconds to catch ride

- By Dewayne Bevil

Eachmornin­gat Disney’sHollywood Studios, there’s a brief moment of silence. Theme-park visitors stand motionless. Heads are bowed. There may be a few thoughts and prayers, but it’s not a religious service.

It’s more like a high-stakes game. Call it Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance roulette, inwhich winners earn the right to ride one ofWalt DisneyWorl­d’s newest, most in-demand rides.

Within seconds of the park’s official opening, it’s over. Cries of joy come from some corners; other voices yell “They’re gone already?” All of the ride’s loading groups have been assigned for the morning, courtesy of theMy Disney Experience app. Those whomissed out can try again at 2 p.m.

“We heard that if a whole bunch of people in your group tried todoit at thesametim­e that it doesn’twork aswell, sowe had one person doing it,” said Kori Vanliere, who was visiting from Minnesota this week. Her group got in “andthen it said something wentwrong. So, we didn’t get in.”

A few steps away, Caitlin Stringer and family were all trying, counting down the seconds to 10 a.m. aloud. It was over 15 seconds later. They cheered. It was her first try, but she had the right touch.

She secured boarding group11. Stringer, who lives in Oklahoma, heard the Animation Courtyard area had good WiFi reception.

“As you can see, nobody’s here,” she said. “But I turned off myWiFi.”

About 50 people typically stand around in the plaza for the key moments. But most of the attraction­s in that area, including the “Voyage of the Little Mermaid” show and Star Wars Launch Bay, remain closed for now. Four character meeting areas stand uninhabite­d in postshutdo­wn mode. Some Disney workers pass through and wish thewaiting visitors luck.

With loading-group rituals come rumors and legends. Some visitors claim it’s best to ditch DisneyWorl­d’sWiFi. Others advise standing in less-crowded parts of the park to avoid reception jams. Refresh the page with the “join” button, some say. Have everyone in your party try to get spots, says one school of thought. No, only have one person in your group try, says another.

Ryan Dorn, an annual passholder who lives in Celebratio­n, estimates that he has been on Rise10time­s. Hewas only unable to get on once, he said. He thinks

there are multiple good places to stand in the park.

“Basically, as long as you are not in the dead center of the park, you are potentiall­y going to have better luck,” he said.

“It’s really just making sure that youare, obviously, ready to go when everything drops,” he said. “Be ready to hit ‘join’ immediatel­y. And, assuming everything doesn’t go in two seconds, literally, you should be able to get in.”

Though one day he got in a group after six minutes while standing in the middle of the park, he said.

Use of a virtual-line system means there’s not a long, winding queue for Rise, where visitors could spend multiple hours just standing, leaning andwaiting. At first, the ride had pre-dawn opportunit­ies for boarding groups. Then, after the park reopened from the coronaviru­s lockdown, there were three rounds of attempts per day. Now folks can attempt to get spots at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. only.

This setup gives ride operations flexibilit­y and ends early gathering of crowds, a Walt Disney World spokeswoma­n said this week. The park now opens at 10 a.m., and visitors must be in the park to get Rise reservatio­ns.

“Opening the virtual queue two times is meant to give peoplewhom­ay not be early risers a chance join the queue later in the day,” she said.

There are many factors at play in the demand for Rise of the Resistance beyond the COVID-19 pandemic. The parks are operating under limited capacity, and that’s also true for rides. Rise’s vehicles seat eight passengers — two rows of four people across— but under current restrictio­ns, they usually take off with one party aboard, even if that means that a visitor flies solo.

“We recently tested an update to the ride vehicles and had Plexiglas barrier between the first and second rows,” the Disney spokeswoma­n said. “We’re working toward introducin­g this to all the vehicles.” That would quickly increase the daily capacity of the ride.

Across Disney World, the FastPass+ reservatio­n system has not been used since the parks reopened in July. Every ride uses the regular standby lines, except for Rise, where one gets the boarding group via the app or doesn’t go at all. Passengers are signaled when their turns are nearing. In the meantime, visitors can enjoy other park experience­s, from restaurant­s to shows, shops and other rides.

Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance, which debuted in December, is one of the newest rides at Disney World.

The nearby Mickey & Minnie’sRunaway Railway opened in March, and many park guests queue up for Runaway Railway while waiting for the 10 a.m. Rise window.

Rise is considered the most technicall­y sophistica­ted Disney attraction, incorporat­ing three distinct ride systems, animatroni­cs and synchroniz­ed moments between music and visuals. There arecomplic­ated special effects, a run literally between the legs of gigantic AT-AT figures, big-screen battles and dozens of stormtroop­ers to maneuver around.

Where there’s a lot going on, a lot can go wrong and create shutdowns, said Dennis Speigel, president of the Internatio­nalTheme Park Services. Plus, factors such as company layoffs, cutbacks and loss of revenue are at play, he said.

“When you bring all those things together, particular­ly the mechanical problem, the scheduling problem, the guests’ problem … it just creates the perfect-storm kind of situation for the big word we hate— delay,” he said.

Other coronaviru­sbased factors include Disney requiring reservatio­ns to enter the parks, and it’s not allowing visitors to go to more than one theme park per day.

This summer, Rick Hayden and family flew from Virginia for a vacation featuring four Disney World parks in four days, meaning their one day atHollywoo­d Studios was their one shot to Rise. They had good luck traveling via Disney Skyliner from their hotel and were first in line to get into the theme park, he said.

Once inside, they followed the advice of other Caribbean Beach resort guestsands­taked out a spot on Sunset Boulevard near the Tower of Terror ride. They avoided getting into line for Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster early because he heard that phone reception was bad there. Acast member gave him tips about the app, which he had not used before.

“Right at 9:59 or maybe 9:58, I started swiping down. And I think I reflexivel­y went one swipe after the ‘join’ prompt came up,” he said. “So then on the next one, I hit it and got number 43.” Their estimated virtual wait time was listed as four hours. Haydenwasn’t considerin­g it a make-or-break attraction for this trip, but he gave the ride high marks.

“I don’t even need to do it again,” he said. “But Iwas glad for the experience.”

 ?? DEWAYNE BEVIL/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Disney’s Hollywood Studios visitors who have secured a boarding group for the theme park’s StarWars: Rise of the Resistance ride queue up. The popular ride opened in December, and Disney is using a virtual queue system that doesn’t allow folks to stand in a physical line for a turn.
DEWAYNE BEVIL/ORLANDO SENTINEL Disney’s Hollywood Studios visitors who have secured a boarding group for the theme park’s StarWars: Rise of the Resistance ride queue up. The popular ride opened in December, and Disney is using a virtual queue system that doesn’t allow folks to stand in a physical line for a turn.

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