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Disney Vacation (4 Viewers)

@rick6668

We love the Contemporary. We are Vacation Club members, so we stay right next door at Bay Lake Tower, but it is linked to CR and we are there all the time b/c thats where the dining, shops and monorail are. 

The good:
• Its one of the 2 original WDW resorts and an engineering marvel (for the time). The history alone is worth it.
• Location: Currently it is the only resort where you can literally walk to the Magic Kingdom, and that is a very overlooked time saving perk. There is a walkway from the resort entrance right to the MK entrance. Its great at park close when everyone is leaving (and jamming buses, monorails and boats) at once. 
• Location #2: If you splurge for a Theme park room, you can wake up overlooking the castle. You can even watch the fireworks from there and the have a TV channel with the music
• The monorail goes right through it. 
Contempo Cafe is one of our favorite QS locations. 

The Meh: 
• Theming: It's not nearly as well themed as other Deluxe resorts, some people feel its rather bland by comparison. Places like the Boardwalk or the Beach club have much more charm and overall more expensive feeling. 
• Pool: Compared to other Deluxe resorts, the pool is not as exciting. 

Overall, for us, the location and access to the MK trumps any of the downsides. But if you are looking for the things on this Meh list, then The Beach Club would be the top choice. Walk/boat access to 2 parks, their pool is hands down the best on property, and the location itself is just beautiful. 

I'm not here to spend your money, but we love the Deluxe category overall. Thats why we became vacation club members b/c we get to stay in any of them. Its hard to make a bad choice in there but also consider how much time you'll be spending at the resort. You are doing an average to short trip, so factor that. We spend 10-14 days per trip there, so we budget a lot of resort time. On the flip side, deluxe's are great b/c with their location getting to/from the parks is the quickest. 

 

 
There right now. Taking a mid afternoon break. Still crazy busy. At Animal Kingdom and all the main rides are at least hour and a half waits on a Monday.

 
Yea I saw tweets of huge lines this morning. Figured it would have been a great time to go. Surprised. 
I’m convinced Disney World just isn’t slow anymore. At some point you gotta think people stop spending $125 a ticket to go on four rides. But it hasn’t happened yet. 

 
With Christmas and New Year's on a Wednesday, there wasn't a standard school restart date this year.  A lot of districts are off until Wednesday or Thursday.  
This. Going this weekend and was hoping I could get some rise of resistance info when it slowed down. Figured by Thursday. Leading up to today, boarding groups were full by 7:05 with some who were there at 6 not getting to ride. guess Ill just cross my fingers. 

 
Pretty cool. 
 

spaceX launch seen over the Contemporary Resort 

https://twitter.com/bioreconstruct/status/1214373478280912897?s=21
Years ago there was a launch when we stayed there.  I woke up early (like 4am), sat out on a pretty chilly balcony for about an hour waiting to see the launch.  

Turns out I was on the wrong side of the hotel  :bag:

When I was a kid, probably late 80's we did a big family trip.  It was maybe a day at Disney then a few days with an aunt I didn't really know, but the last day we saw the shuttle launch.  It was the coolest thing.  Definitely a childhood highlight.  My 9 year old is eaten up with this SpaceX stuff.  I need to take him down there sometime.  

 
@rick6668

We love the Contemporary. We are Vacation Club members, so we stay right next door at Bay Lake Tower, but it is linked to CR and we are there all the time b/c thats where the dining, shops and monorail are. 

The good:
• Its one of the 2 original WDW resorts and an engineering marvel (for the time). The history alone is worth it.
• Location: Currently it is the only resort where you can literally walk to the Magic Kingdom, and that is a very overlooked time saving perk. There is a walkway from the resort entrance right to the MK entrance. Its great at park close when everyone is leaving (and jamming buses, monorails and boats) at once. 
• Location #2: If you splurge for a Theme park room, you can wake up overlooking the castle. You can even watch the fireworks from there and the have a TV channel with the music
• The monorail goes right through it. 
Contempo Cafe is one of our favorite QS locations. 

The Meh: 
• Theming: It's not nearly as well themed as other Deluxe resorts, some people feel its rather bland by comparison. Places like the Boardwalk or the Beach club have much more charm and overall more expensive feeling. 
• Pool: Compared to other Deluxe resorts, the pool is not as exciting. 

Overall, for us, the location and access to the MK trumps any of the downsides. But if you are looking for the things on this Meh list, then The Beach Club would be the top choice. Walk/boat access to 2 parks, their pool is hands down the best on property, and the location itself is just beautiful. 

I'm not here to spend your money, but we love the Deluxe category overall. Thats why we became vacation club members b/c we get to stay in any of them. Its hard to make a bad choice in there but also consider how much time you'll be spending at the resort. You are doing an average to short trip, so factor that. We spend 10-14 days per trip there, so we budget a lot of resort time. On the flip side, deluxe's are great b/c with their location getting to/from the parks is the quickest. 
 
Well, you sold me.  Booked 5 nights at the Contemporary, free meal plan, 5 day park hopper passes with a Theme Park room view.  Booked 2 nights at the RP at Universal.  UEP was a huge bonus for this and based on your comments we should be able to see everything we want there in the 2 days.

I'll have more questions on meal bookings and FP but there is time for that.  Thanks for the help so far.

 
Leave tomorrow for 4 nights at OKW resort. Looking forward to relaxing and having a key west sunset ale at Olivias. 

Daughter is frozen crazy so hoping to get on the Maelstrom a couple times. Will be a first for me. 

 
Will be in Tampa in February, I have 1 day I can do a theme park ,  can go on weekday as well. I hate lines and just assume not go if going to be bad but is the Star Wars park worth going to in February on a weekday without losing my mind of  a wasted trip  due to lines? If Star Wars going to be like that I might opt for Universal or Bush Gardens . Thanks in advanced for any insight. Just don't want to waste the 1 day I have is all . 

 
Will be in Tampa in February, I have 1 day I can do a theme park ,  can go on weekday as well. I hate lines and just assume not go if going to be bad but is the Star Wars park worth going to in February on a weekday without losing my mind of  a wasted trip  due to lines? If Star Wars going to be like that I might opt for Universal or Bush Gardens . Thanks in advanced for any insight. Just don't want to waste the 1 day I have is all . 
If it were me, I'd stay in Tampa and do Busch Gardens especially if you're by yourself, no kids etc.

 
Staying in Tampa for WSOP circuit . But have 1 day to do park. No kids . Really want to do Star Wars but not sure worth it right now if over crowded due to being new still. But Busch Gardens seems like a good plan B . Just was wondering what could be expected at Star Wars this time of year on a weekday.  Thanks Comish

 
If you want to do Star Wars get there at 5:30 am. Should get you on both rides. You’ll need to download the my Disney experience app. 

 
Staying in Tampa for WSOP circuit . But have 1 day to do park. No kids . Really want to do Star Wars but not sure worth it right now if over crowded due to being new still. But Busch Gardens seems like a good plan B . Just was wondering what could be expected at Star Wars this time of year on a weekday.  Thanks Comish
I have been following the trends bc I will be there on monday.

Yesterday, the boarding groups were done by 7:30am

So if you want to go to HS and ride the new ride, get there early and jump on the app real quick

As of right now, I plan to be there at 6:00am. Which means getting an uber since busses dont run that early. 

I think we are going to rope drop RnR coaster and then wait on the Smugglers run line. Have Savi for 7:50pm so we dont have to carry our sabers around all day and lunch at Ogas. 

 
530 am ?  6am ? get on apps ? didn't even think these parks opened until 9am.  lol... I think this has solidified my decision to just go to Busch Gardens. Thanks guys for making this a no brainer. 

 
530 am ?  6am ? get on apps ? didn't even think these parks opened until 9am.  lol... I think this has solidified my decision to just go to Busch Gardens. Thanks guys for making this a no brainer. 
yea I was about to say that to even get to WDW/Studios from Tampa for that early time you would need to be on the road at a stupid time. And at that there is no promise you would get in an early boarding group. Play it say, have fun, go to BG.

 
530 am ?  6am ? get on apps ? didn't even think these parks opened until 9am.  lol... I think this has solidified my decision to just go to Busch Gardens. Thanks guys for making this a no brainer. 
It's work to go on vacation to Disney these days...you're making the right choice.

 
Just got back last night. Hated every minute of it but my 8 year old daughter had a great time. She’s easily my least affectionate child and she was all over me the entire trip. The one on one time was golden so it was worth every penny. Talked to a cast member who said there aren’t any slow times anymore. It’s busy and crazy. Luckily we went at just a busy time of year. The less busy times they get a lot of South American groups, offer discounted room/meal plans and cut staffing so the rides run slower. As has been said many times. Get there before the parks opens. Can get more done in that first hour than the rest of the day combined. 

 
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Because of traffic from the half marathon this morning, it took close to an hour to get from riverside to epcot. 

Luckily test track was down and we got one of the multiple experience ride whenever fast passes. We have basically done everything except soarin at this point. 

 
Full marathon is tomorrow.
 

Running the 10k during Star Wars Rival weekend in April (last Disney race for me) and they tweaked the course a bit so more EPCOT and resort area and less MK parking lot. 

 
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Boarding Group 70. Woot

My join boarding group never showed up. But we had 4 people doing it. My wife is the MVP of today

 
Thanks that was great!  I'll need some recommendations on what the best places to eat are so I can make reservations when the time comes.
NP. opinions are all over the place when it comes to dining, and we all have our favs and not-so greats. The best way to plan dining is try and figure out what type of experiences you want vs where you are going to be on certain days and plan around that. 

Experience types:
• Character meals: These are all about the traditional Disney character experience. Most are buffet style and are a great use of credits because their OOP (out of pocket) cost is pretty high, so you are getting good value per credit. Usually these are 1 credit per person meals. There are others that are sit down meals that would be the same 1 crd, but then there are ones like Cinderella's Royal Table (where you are eating inside the castle) that are 2 credits. This is a pretty good run down of character meals.

• Regular dining: There are a ton of normal-to-highly themed restaurants on property. In the parks, resorts and over at Disney Springs (Disneys free to enter shopping and entertainment complex), you can find pretty much anything you want. Most all of them (99%) accept the dining plan. 

• Signature dining: these are the top tier restaurants on property. These normally are 2 credit meals. 

• Dinner Shows: There are 2 running dinner shows on property. The Hawaiian Luau at the Polynesian resort, and the Hoop-de-do review at Fort Wilderness. These are generally 1-2 credits each depending on what seating section you reserve. Note that you will spend much more time at these vs any other dining b/c they are full on dinner shows.

I know it seems super early, but you should start planning where you want to be on your park days. WDW is a huge place and there is a ton of distance between locations. The last thing you want to be doing is criss crossing property going from resort > park > restaurant > park, etc. If you can get even a basic itinerary down, it will help to slug in your dining. You are staying in a really good spot for dining b/c you have 4 resorts within arm's reach plus good reach of Epcot and their proximity resorts with some good options. 

So whats best? Gosh, who knows. But here is my bad attempt:

Character 
• 1800 Park Fare @ Grand Floridian: Really good food overall. The characters are different between brkfst and lunch/dinner, but they are mostly what are called "face characters" where they are not wearing a mask and can actually communicate with you. IMO, as we have older kids, the silent characters get kinda boring. If you have a fun personality and can banter with them a bit, it makes for a great time. 
• Chef Mickey @ Contemporary: We stay there a lot, so its our staple meal. Food is average, but plenty of options. you won't leave hungry. Its a bit loud and chaotic, but you are also getting the main dudes: MM, Minnie, Goofy, Donald and Pluto. 
• I forget your kids ages and genders, but if you want all Princesses, Akershus in Epcot is your best 1 credit bet. I prefer breakfast b/c it is more traditional, lunch and dinner are more Norwegian flavors which may or may not work for you. The Royal table (Castle) is a great meal, but it is 2 credits and you are getting the same princesses.  

Sit Down: Again, you can throw a rock anywhere on property and hit a restaurant there. For me:
• Magic Kingdom: Not much here surprisingly.
• Epcot: You'll get lots of international options here. We like Hibachi , so Japan is in the mix. Mexico is really cool for the scenery, but i've heard mixed on the menu. UK has a really fun pub with traditional food. LeCelier is in Canada and is one of the best places to get a steak—It is 2 credits though. Wild card: by the time you get there, the new "Space themed" restaurant called Space 220 should be open, it seems like a cool concept where you get in an elevator and shoot up to space. Once in the restaurant, all the windows are LED panels showing outerspace. Double wild card, there are 3 resorts within walking distance of Epcot that have really good restaurants...I'll mention them below. But there is a back exit to Epcot and they are right there, very easy.
• Studios: The Brown Derby is your best bet here. However, there are 2 really fun restaurants I enjoy. 50's Prime time Cafe is one. It is set up like a 50's kitchen and the servers (your aunts and uncles), make sure those 50's era manners are followed, including eating all your veggies and washing your hands after the bathroom trip. The other is Sci-Fi Dine In. Like no place you ever eaten before. You basically eat in  special cars with tables that all face a big drive-in theater screen showing clips of old b&w monster movies. 
• Animal Kingdom: Tusker House is the main draw here, but it is a character meal (A very good one but you need to be somewhat adventurous eater for lunch or dinner). However, Yak and Yeti is the best sit down there IMO. There is also a Rain forest Cafe there. 

Disney Springs

This is the best thing to happen to dining at Disney since who knows when. Dis Springs was the old Disney Marketplace and Pleasure Island location. It is their shopping, dining and entertainment hub on property and it is pretty awesome. It is free to enter and walk around, no tickets or anything required. However it is also very popular with locals so it gets very busy on a weekend night. Here you will find most restaurants are not owned by Disney, but they still accept the dining plan and can be booked at the same time as other on-property locations. Bonus is that they also hold a portion of their tables out of the Disney system, so it may seem to book quick, but you can usually grab a table on the Open Table app. 

My favs (that I have been to) include The Boathouse, Homecomin and Morimoto Asia. Rain Forest Cafe also has another location here and a sister restaurant called T-Rex with a Dino theme here. This is a pretty good run down. DS is a great place to go when you don't ant to do a theme park, but it is also kind of out of the way and pretty large, so plan accordingly. 

Resorts and Signature Sit Down:
• Contemporary: California Grill is a pretty awesome meal. It is signature, so 2 credits. 
• Beach Club (one of them you can walk to from Epcot): Cape May Cafe is a basic character meal for breakfast, but dinner it turns into a fantastic seafood buffet with endless, delicious crablegs. I can't leave there without polishing off a tables-worth. 
• Boardwalk (also walkable from Epcot) has 2 restaurants Flying Fish and Trattoria al Forno which are both great meals outside the hustle and bustle of the theme parks.  
• Inside the MK there is Be Our Guest which is a signature (2 credits) restaurant themed after Beauty and the Beast. Its a pretty cool restaurant with some very themed rooms. They recently changed the menu and I have not been there since. Its a pretty hard reservation to score though. 
• In animal Kingdom is Tiffins which is a 2 credit meal. I've heard good things, but have not been. 
• At the Polynesian is the widely favorite Ohana (Dinner). Again, another hard one to score, but if you get it, pack stretchy pants. Its a sit down, but in addition to the ample sides, the servers walk around with meat skewers of steak, (huge) shrimp and chicken. But be sure to save some space for the bread pudding...offa. There is also the easier to get Kona Cafe where you won't get the Ohana experience, but they do have the bread pudding. 
• Across the lake from the contemporary (via boat) you can go to the Wilderness lodge and hit Whispering Canyon. They have toned things down a bit, but its still a blast for kids. I won't ruin it for you, but it is a good meal and a fun time. Plus WL is an amazing resort and a trip to the lobby is worth it alone. 
• My last recommendation is really hard to get to, and I almost don't want to mention it, but I love it there. Sanaa at Animal Kingdom lodge (Kidani side) is pretty damn good. The bread service is a must do for me, so much so I've made runs there just for that when I am there solo. The 2 restaurants on the Jambo side are amazing a well...Jiko and Boma, and like Wilderness lodge, that resort lobby is amazing. But again, they are very much out of the way. 


Just an additional point to ponder, there are no resort > resort buses, only park > resort. You are in a great location having the monorail right there. That makes dining at the Polly or Grand Flo so much easier for you, and the boat to Wilderness lodge makes that resort within reach too. When we need to go to the other resorts, we use Uber, Lyft or taxis a lot. It is so much more convenient and direct. not as magical, but hey, I got places to go. Most trips have not been more than $15 each way. 

hope that helps 
 

 
This trip has been pretty terrible from a customer service perspective. Kelly from Ft. lauderdale was the rudest employee i have encountered at disney. Daughter turned three on our trip. Disney policy is that kids dont age at disney. So age at check in is all that matters. I assume because their IT simply cant handle prorated stuff. It says children that turn three on their stay are complimentary guests of mickey. Kelly asked us how old our daughter is.

Wife: she just turned 3 yesterday

Kelly: she needs a ticket. 

Wife: not if she turns three on her stay. 

Kelly: it clearly says right there she needs a ticket. 

Me: it says so right on your website she doesnt. 

kelly: No it doesnt. Trust me. This is my job. I know what i am talking about. 

Me: well here read it( and i showed her when we checked in)

Kelly: (takes forever to read one paragraph) Well that's wrong. 

Me: Well here it is on your site again. That wrong too? 

Kelly: you will have to go to guest relations. 

Guest relations let us in and gave us an extra fastpass to use. Although it was useless for a couple of us since it wasnt valid for star wars or pixar and we dont do rock and roller coaster or tower of terror and all the other rides are junk there.

I hate people that refuse to admit they were wrong even when it is clearly right in front of them.

 
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Star wars makes this place infinitely better. The two rides were absolutely outstanding. 

@parasaurolophus

if you are still here, Ill take your fastpasses. Im sitting by Frozen exit in a Rangers tank top. 

 
We're going to Disneyland (we live in San Diego) Jan. 26-27 for my daughter's 15th birthday. I just discovered that the Rise of the Resistance ride opens this Friday. If anyone here is going and can provide tips/experience description, that would be great. I've already seen on the Disney site some stuff about virtual queue and downloading an app. We're going on a Sunday and a non-holiday Monday in late January, so I'm hoping we don't have to spend half the day in line for one freakin' ride. 

 
We're going to Disneyland (we live in San Diego) Jan. 26-27 for my daughter's 15th birthday. I just discovered that the Rise of the Resistance ride opens this Friday. If anyone here is going and can provide tips/experience description, that would be great. I've already seen on the Disney site some stuff about virtual queue and downloading an app. We're going on a Sunday and a non-holiday Monday in late January, so I'm hoping we don't have to spend half the day in line for one freakin' ride. 
I cant speak for DL, but we did it today at DW. I assume they will do the same thing

They board the ride by a boarding group. In order to get on to the boarding group, your entire party needs to be in the park. The second the park opens, you can join a boarding group on the my Disney experience app. We got to the park 1 hour before it officially opened to make sure we were all scanned in. I would have everyone in your party DL the app. We had 4 people trying. Mine never even gave me an option to join. The girl next to us got boarding group 14. My wife, got it 10 seconds after her and we were boarding group 70. 

As the day goes on, you can check to see what BG they were on. I had a notification tell me when we could go. They give you a 2 hour window to get there. 

We basically "waited" on line for 40 minutes before the first of 3 phases of the ride. 

Overall, it was a great experience if you take away the stress of waking up at 5:15, getting an uber and then crossing your fingers you are quick enough on the app. 

Having said that, there a way fewer people in DL on any given day than DW so that will help you. 

Pretty sure they made it through every Boarding group today, even the backup ones despite the ride being down for an extended amount of time. 

Good luck and have fun. We thought it was amazing. 

 
AcerFC said:
I cant speak for DL, but we did it today at DW. I assume they will do the same thing

They board the ride by a boarding group. In order to get on to the boarding group, your entire party needs to be in the park. The second the park opens, you can join a boarding group on the my Disney experience app. We got to the park 1 hour before it officially opened to make sure we were all scanned in. I would have everyone in your party DL the app. We had 4 people trying. Mine never even gave me an option to join. The girl next to us got boarding group 14. My wife, got it 10 seconds after her and we were boarding group 70. 

As the day goes on, you can check to see what BG they were on. I had a notification tell me when we could go. They give you a 2 hour window to get there. 

We basically "waited" on line for 40 minutes before the first of 3 phases of the ride. 

Overall, it was a great experience if you take away the stress of waking up at 5:15, getting an uber and then crossing your fingers you are quick enough on the app. 

Having said that, there a way fewer people in DL on any given day than DW so that will help you. 

Pretty sure they made it through every Boarding group today, even the backup ones despite the ride being down for an extended amount of time. 

Good luck and have fun. We thought it was amazing. 
Thanks! We decided to splurge and stay at the Grand Californian, adjacent to California Adventure, so we're pretty close to the park. 

Question: I know nothing about the ride. We went to Disneyworld two years ago and the first ride we did was the Avatar one. I get motion sickness really easily and almost puked. Anything like that for the Star Wars ride? It didn't seem like it from the description. 

 
Bruce Dickinson said:
Anyone else here going to media day for Rise Of The Resistance at Disneyland on Thursday?  Or just me?  
Nice. How did you pull that off? Tell me you or your wife finally made the mom’s panel??!!  

 
glvsav37 said:
NP. opinions are all over the place when it comes to dining, and we all have our favs and not-so greats. The best way to plan dining is try and figure out what type of experiences you want vs where you are going to be on certain days and plan around that. 

Experience types:
• Character meals: These are all about the traditional Disney character experience. Most are buffet style and are a great use of credits because their OOP (out of pocket) cost is pretty high, so you are getting good value per credit. Usually these are 1 credit per person meals. There are others that are sit down meals that would be the same 1 crd, but then there are ones like Cinderella's Royal Table (where you are eating inside the castle) that are 2 credits. This is a pretty good run down of character meals.

• Regular dining: There are a ton of normal-to-highly themed restaurants on property. In the parks, resorts and over at Disney Springs (Disneys free to enter shopping and entertainment complex), you can find pretty much anything you want. Most all of them (99%) accept the dining plan. 

• Signature dining: these are the top tier restaurants on property. These normally are 2 credit meals. 

• Dinner Shows: There are 2 running dinner shows on property. The Hawaiian Luau at the Polynesian resort, and the Hoop-de-do review at Fort Wilderness. These are generally 1-2 credits each depending on what seating section you reserve. Note that you will spend much more time at these vs any other dining b/c they are full on dinner shows.

I know it seems super early, but you should start planning where you want to be on your park days. WDW is a huge place and there is a ton of distance between locations. The last thing you want to be doing is criss crossing property going from resort > park > restaurant > park, etc. If you can get even a basic itinerary down, it will help to slug in your dining. You are staying in a really good spot for dining b/c you have 4 resorts within arm's reach plus good reach of Epcot and their proximity resorts with some good options. 

So whats best? Gosh, who knows. But here is my bad attempt:

Character 
• 1800 Park Fare @ Grand Floridian: Really good food overall. The characters are different between brkfst and lunch/dinner, but they are mostly what are called "face characters" where they are not wearing a mask and can actually communicate with you. IMO, as we have older kids, the silent characters get kinda boring. If you have a fun personality and can banter with them a bit, it makes for a great time. 
• Chef Mickey @ Contemporary: We stay there a lot, so its our staple meal. Food is average, but plenty of options. you won't leave hungry. Its a bit loud and chaotic, but you are also getting the main dudes: MM, Minnie, Goofy, Donald and Pluto. 
• I forget your kids ages and genders, but if you want all Princesses, Akershus in Epcot is your best 1 credit bet. I prefer breakfast b/c it is more traditional, lunch and dinner are more Norwegian flavors which may or may not work for you. The Royal table (Castle) is a great meal, but it is 2 credits and you are getting the same princesses.  

Sit Down: Again, you can throw a rock anywhere on property and hit a restaurant there. For me:
• Magic Kingdom: Not much here surprisingly.
• Epcot: You'll get lots of international options here. We like Hibachi , so Japan is in the mix. Mexico is really cool for the scenery, but i've heard mixed on the menu. UK has a really fun pub with traditional food. LeCelier is in Canada and is one of the best places to get a steak—It is 2 credits though. Wild card: by the time you get there, the new "Space themed" restaurant called Space 220 should be open, it seems like a cool concept where you get in an elevator and shoot up to space. Once in the restaurant, all the windows are LED panels showing outerspace. Double wild card, there are 3 resorts within walking distance of Epcot that have really good restaurants...I'll mention them below. But there is a back exit to Epcot and they are right there, very easy.
• Studios: The Brown Derby is your best bet here. However, there are 2 really fun restaurants I enjoy. 50's Prime time Cafe is one. It is set up like a 50's kitchen and the servers (your aunts and uncles), make sure those 50's era manners are followed, including eating all your veggies and washing your hands after the bathroom trip. The other is Sci-Fi Dine In. Like no place you ever eaten before. You basically eat in  special cars with tables that all face a big drive-in theater screen showing clips of old b&w monster movies. 
• Animal Kingdom: Tusker House is the main draw here, but it is a character meal (A very good one but you need to be somewhat adventurous eater for lunch or dinner). However, Yak and Yeti is the best sit down there IMO. There is also a Rain forest Cafe there. 

Disney Springs

This is the best thing to happen to dining at Disney since who knows when. Dis Springs was the old Disney Marketplace and Pleasure Island location. It is their shopping, dining and entertainment hub on property and it is pretty awesome. It is free to enter and walk around, no tickets or anything required. However it is also very popular with locals so it gets very busy on a weekend night. Here you will find most restaurants are not owned by Disney, but they still accept the dining plan and can be booked at the same time as other on-property locations. Bonus is that they also hold a portion of their tables out of the Disney system, so it may seem to book quick, but you can usually grab a table on the Open Table app. 

My favs (that I have been to) include The Boathouse, Homecomin and Morimoto Asia. Rain Forest Cafe also has another location here and a sister restaurant called T-Rex with a Dino theme here. This is a pretty good run down. DS is a great place to go when you don't ant to do a theme park, but it is also kind of out of the way and pretty large, so plan accordingly. 

Resorts and Signature Sit Down:
• Contemporary: California Grill is a pretty awesome meal. It is signature, so 2 credits. 
• Beach Club (one of them you can walk to from Epcot): Cape May Cafe is a basic character meal for breakfast, but dinner it turns into a fantastic seafood buffet with endless, delicious crablegs. I can't leave there without polishing off a tables-worth. 
• Boardwalk (also walkable from Epcot) has 2 restaurants Flying Fish and Trattoria al Forno which are both great meals outside the hustle and bustle of the theme parks.  
• Inside the MK there is Be Our Guest which is a signature (2 credits) restaurant themed after Beauty and the Beast. Its a pretty cool restaurant with some very themed rooms. They recently changed the menu and I have not been there since. Its a pretty hard reservation to score though. 
• In animal Kingdom is Tiffins which is a 2 credit meal. I've heard good things, but have not been. 
• At the Polynesian is the widely favorite Ohana (Dinner). Again, another hard one to score, but if you get it, pack stretchy pants. Its a sit down, but in addition to the ample sides, the servers walk around with meat skewers of steak, (huge) shrimp and chicken. But be sure to save some space for the bread pudding...offa. There is also the easier to get Kona Cafe where you won't get the Ohana experience, but they do have the bread pudding. 
• Across the lake from the contemporary (via boat) you can go to the Wilderness lodge and hit Whispering Canyon. They have toned things down a bit, but its still a blast for kids. I won't ruin it for you, but it is a good meal and a fun time. Plus WL is an amazing resort and a trip to the lobby is worth it alone. 
• My last recommendation is really hard to get to, and I almost don't want to mention it, but I love it there. Sanaa at Animal Kingdom lodge (Kidani side) is pretty damn good. The bread service is a must do for me, so much so I've made runs there just for that when I am there solo. The 2 restaurants on the Jambo side are amazing a well...Jiko and Boma, and like Wilderness lodge, that resort lobby is amazing. But again, they are very much out of the way. 


Just an additional point to ponder, there are no resort > resort buses, only park > resort. You are in a great location having the monorail right there. That makes dining at the Polly or Grand Flo so much easier for you, and the boat to Wilderness lodge makes that resort within reach too. When we need to go to the other resorts, we use Uber, Lyft or taxis a lot. It is so much more convenient and direct. not as magical, but hey, I got places to go. Most trips have not been more than $15 each way. 

hope that helps 
 
Wow!  Thanks a lot for this.  This gives us some really great options.  At first review I am linking Ohana, Akershus, Space220, Whispering Canyon and Chef Mickeys/

Need to sort this out and plan out each day with parks/meals and fast passes.

So I can book meals 180 days in advance, but fast passes 120 days correct?

Do you think the Rise of Resistance ride will change to fast passes by then, from reading the posts it seems you need to get there early and get in a boarding group.  This is very confusing to me.

 
This whole Rise of the Resistance thing seems awful.  You have to be there, with your entire family/group before the park opens to use the app and save your spot?  Knowing it might be 5pm before you ride?   And it still might not be able to ride that day?  

Is it always going to be like this?  

 
Question: I know nothing about the ride. We went to Disneyworld two years ago and the first ride we did was the Avatar one. I get motion sickness really easily and almost puked. Anything like that for the Star Wars ride? It didn't seem like it from the description. 
Yeah, I need to know this as well.  Any rides I need to stay away from?  I hate that I get motion sickness, but it's fine on coasters/such , but the rides where it feels like you are moving  but aren't are the worst.  I don't want to ruin the day.  Years ago I did the ride at Epcot where you are shrunken and go into a person's body and I was wrecked for a few hours afterward.

 
This whole Rise of the Resistance thing seems awful.  You have to be there, with your entire family/group before the park opens to use the app and save your spot?  Knowing it might be 5pm before you ride?   And it still might not be able to ride that day?  

Is it always going to be like this?  
Hard to see how it’s not for an extremely long time. That seven dwarves ride routinely has 2.5 hour waits still and it’s been open 6 years and it’s just okay. This thing is supposed to be a landmark ride with maybe the most popular brand behind it. 
 

I sure don’t see any bloggers with their dumb hot takes on how galaxy’s edge is a failure now. 

 
Wow!  Thanks a lot for this.  This gives us some really great options.  At first review I am linking Ohana, Akershus, Space220, Whispering Canyon and Chef Mickeys/

Need to sort this out and plan out each day with parks/meals and fast passes.

So I can book meals 180 days in advance, but fast passes 120 days correct?

Do you think the Rise of Resistance ride will change to fast passes by then, from reading the posts it seems you need to get there early and get in a boarding group.  This is very confusing to me.
lol. yes, and sorry for that. I tend to write novels but its because Disney vacations can get complicated, and I feel bad when people who are not ready for the amount of options there are disappointed afterward  b/c they were not prepared. 

Its amazing though the difference when you go through all this and then hop over to Universal, it will be like night and day. 

anyway, back on topic: So thats the big FU from WDW to its guests. You need to book your dining at 180 days but can't do any actual real park related planning (fastpasses) until 60 days out (not 120 as you mention). And as we mentioned, you kind of want to eat where you will be, but that leaves a lot of time in between for things to change—park hours, special events, etc. 

I would not stress over every part of your schedule just yet, but I would block out days for your theme park itinerary. Say "monday and Wed is MK, Tuesday is Epcot, etc." Then you can block in your sit down meals around that based on proximity, time of day, breakfast or lunch, etc. 

If you are liking the ones listed, here are some tips

• Ohana: this is best for dinner, so plan on being around the magic Kingdom (MK) as you are right there. Plus it is on your monorial line, so you can easily go back to the room, freshen up and go to dinner. If you have park hopper tickets, you could do another park, like animal kingdom in the am,  go back to resort, then to dinner and finish the night off at MK. 

• Akershus: I like the breakfast here, so def plan this on your Epcot day, esp considering it is in the back of the park. Eat and then go enjoy the park
• Space220: Same as above, it's in Epcot. Now that begs the question, how many days were you planning on being in Epcot? Right now Epcot is not the best park b/c it will be under heavy construction. 
• Whispering Canyon: Given your resort location, this is another good choice. Both meals are good, but dinner is more on the fun side and what this restaurant is known for. You can go to the MK easily from here or take a bus from that resort to any other theme park. 
• Chef Mickeys: This is literally inside your resort. So you can go anywhere from here. 

I like to plan with a spreadsheet that we add to as we make plans. I block out the days and where we intend on being at any given time. I break each day up into morning, afternoon, and nighttime. I list out the restaurants we want to visit, then slot them in as we make the reservations. Slotting them into the right part of their day helps when I make the fastpasses b/c I will make sure I leave room around that reservation. 

Here is one of mine as an example. I tend to get overly detailed (but no nearly as others), but I find it really helps me stay organized day by day. 

 
Thanks! We decided to splurge and stay at the Grand Californian, adjacent to California Adventure, so we're pretty close to the park. 

Question: I know nothing about the ride. We went to Disneyworld two years ago and the first ride we did was the Avatar one. I get motion sickness really easily and almost puked. Anything like that for the Star Wars ride? It didn't seem like it from the description. 
There is movement and screens but nothing like avatar or mission space. My wife gets squeamish and she was fine. 

 
lol. yes, and sorry for that. I tend to write novels but its because Disney vacations can get complicated, and I feel bad when people who are not ready for the amount of options there are disappointed afterward  b/c they were not prepared. 

I like to plan with a spreadsheet that we add to as we make plans. I block out the days and where we intend on being at any given time. I break each day up into morning, afternoon, and nighttime. I list out the restaurants we want to visit, then slot them in as we make the reservations. Slotting them into the right part of their day helps when I make the fastpasses b/c I will make sure I leave room around that reservation. 

Here is one of mine as an example. I tend to get overly detailed (but no nearly as others), but I find it really helps me stay organized day by day. 
FYI,  I was saying the details on the Rise to Resistance ride was confusing, you have been great with your details.  Not confusing at all, just lots of options which is great!

Yes, we have park hopper tickets, so your ideas are good.  

BTW, I can't access that spreadsheet.

 
Yeah, I need to know this as well.  Any rides I need to stay away from?  I hate that I get motion sickness, but it's fine on coasters/such , but the rides where it feels like you are moving  but aren't are the worst.  I don't want to ruin the day.  Years ago I did the ride at Epcot where you are shrunken and go into a person's body and I was wrecked for a few hours afterward.
that was Body Wars and is gone now, but Star Tours at Studios is the exact same thing. 

Motion sickess is tough when it comes to theme parks. So many degrees of triggers and what not. 

If screens/simulators are a problem I would def avoid:

MK: nothing I can think of. 
Epcot: Soarin is great, but go with caution. It is a simulator but you feel like you are in a hang glider looking at a huge screen, Research it.
Def avoid Mission space. Not only is it motion, but super claustrophobic .
Studios: Like above, Star tours. The new millennium falcon ride (smugglers run) is kinda the same thing, but you have more room in the cabin, and can close your eyes, look away if needed. Rise of the Resistance is the new big one and that is a mix of ride and simulator. So you are getting times where you are physically moving around in a ride vehicle, but it is mixed with screens on the walls and the final scene put you into a simulator for a few seconds. If you know when it is coming and can close your eyes you should be fine. Research it. 
Animal kingdom: Saddly you may want to skip Flight of Passage. Like Soarin, you are moving in from of a very large screen. The thing you are seated on is technically moving, but you mind is doing most of the work as there is simulated flying, long drops and dips. 

Now when you get to Universal, there are a bunch of screen-based rides. We can have a separate conversation about those
 

 
FYI,  I was saying the details on the Rise to Resistance ride was confusing, you have been great with your details.  Not confusing at all, just lots of options which is great!

Yes, we have park hopper tickets, so your ideas are good.  

BTW, I can't access that spreadsheet.
I understood ya..its all good. I just worry sometimes bc/ I feel like I could overload you more with my mini-novels. 

try this link, my bad. I had the wrong sharing permissions 

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1KTOxivEoPQOJyyPpF5EtSIK8iey6ALCtvpEdCJbqkCM/edit?usp=sharing

 
This whole Rise of the Resistance thing seems awful.  You have to be there, with your entire family/group before the park opens to use the app and save your spot?  Knowing it might be 5pm before you ride?   And it still might not be able to ride that day?  

Is it always going to be like this?  
It is not perfect, BUT, they dont want to post Hagrid like wait times and this helps. The backup boarding groups were lined up all the way to the muppets movie. Yikes. 

Flight of passage right now is 195 minutes. Im about to fast pass it right now. 

 
Yeah, I need to know this as well.  Any rides I need to stay away from?  I hate that I get motion sickness, but it's fine on coasters/such , but the rides where it feels like you are moving  but aren't are the worst.  I don't want to ruin the day.  Years ago I did the ride at Epcot where you are shrunken and go into a person's body and I was wrecked for a few hours afterward.
The motion sickness really is the worst. My family loved the Avatar ride, and from what I experienced, it was pretty amazing, but if you're like me, it's not worth it. (You sit on something like a motorcycle with this giant screen in front of you, and the saddle thing moves around to imitate flying.) It took me a couple hours to get over it, and it was the very first thing we went on. I really did think I was gonna puke and force the best ride in the park to be shut down. It took everything I had to keep it in. 

The only other ride I was wary about was Soarin' at Epcot, and I was OK on that. And my motion sickness is pretty severe -- I got sick on a freakin' kayak in Hawaii and puked. Getting old really sucks, man. 

 
The motion sickness really is the worst. My family loved the Avatar ride, and from what I experienced, it was pretty amazing, but if you're like me, it's not worth it. (You sit on something like a motorcycle with this giant screen in front of you, and the saddle thing moves around to imitate flying.) It took me a couple hours to get over it, and it was the very first thing we went on. I really did think I was gonna puke and force the best ride in the park to be shut down. It took everything I had to keep it in. 

The only other ride I was wary about was Soarin' at Epcot, and I was OK on that. And my motion sickness is pretty severe -- I got sick on a freakin' kayak in Hawaii and puked. Getting old really sucks, man. 
Thanks for this.  I'll let my son go on it if he wants, but at this point I've learned to just stay away from some of them.  

 
Nice. How did you pull that off? Tell me you or your wife finally made the mom’s panel??!!  
Didn’t apply this year.  But I still felt the thrill of victory when a few from a DPMP wannabe/enthusiast group I participate in made the 2020 class.  Was so fun seeing their photos of them logging in to the DPMP admin panel right after midnight on New Year’s Day and getting to work.  One was quoted in that NYT article the other day about DPMP.  (BTW, that article put the applicant pool at 10,000 - didn’t cite a source, but it was interesting seeing that number in print, in ballpark of what we’d estimated)

Anyway, I was ready planning on being in southern California later this week - the kid is probably going to college in Europe but looking at a few stateside schools just in case, so we planned a visit to a couple of SoCal ones in the middle of winter because we’re that smart.  I went to the media day for the DLR SWGE opening as assistant cameraman/stenographer for a couple of Disney Parks bloggers, helping them get photos/video from a few different angles, doing some instant translating of Star Wars universe stuff lifelong SW fans know but general Disney enthusiasts might not, stuff like that... and I’ll be at RotR day in a similar capacity.  So it was dumb luck that I was going to be in town, and we had the flexibility to add a day to the trip.  

 
Yeah, I need to know this as well.  Any rides I need to stay away from?  I hate that I get motion sickness, but it's fine on coasters/such , but the rides where it feels like you are moving  but aren't are the worst.  I don't want to ruin the day.  Years ago I did the ride at Epcot where you are shrunken and go into a person's body and I was wrecked for a few hours afterward.
Stay away from:
Flight of Passage
Soarin'
Mission Space
Star Tours

 
This trip has been pretty terrible from a customer service perspective. Kelly from Ft. lauderdale was the rudest employee i have encountered at disney. Daughter turned three on our trip. Disney policy is that kids dont age at disney. So age at check in is all that matters. I assume because their IT simply cant handle prorated stuff. It says children that turn three on their stay are complimentary guests of mickey. Kelly asked us how old our daughter is.

Wife: she just turned 3 yesterday

Kelly: she needs a ticket. 

Wife: not if she turns three on her stay. 

Kelly: it clearly says right there she needs a ticket. 

Me: it says so right on your website she doesnt. 

kelly: No it doesnt. Trust me. This is my job. I know what i am talking about. 

Me: well here read it( and i showed her when we checked in)

Kelly: (takes forever to read one paragraph) Well that's wrong. 

Me: Well here it is on your site again. That wrong too? 

Kelly: you will have to go to guest relations. 

Guest relations let us in and gave us an extra fastpass to use. Although it was useless for a couple of us since it wasnt valid for star wars or pixar and we dont do rock and roller coaster or tower of terror and all the other rides are junk there.

I hate people that refuse to admit they were wrong even when it is clearly right in front of them.
Part of the reason why I canceled my Disney card and vowed I’m never going back was due to Kathy from New York at the front gate of Hollywood studios.   

Got there at 6AM.  Got to front of line at 6:45, resident tickets didn’t work.  Bob from Iowa said don’t worry, go to guest relations and come back to front of the line, he walked us to the side door and to the line.

guest relations line takes 15 more mIn, main gate still way backed up.  Ride of the resistance Que went from 70 to 110

go to front of line and Kathy tells me I need to get back in line.  Tell her bob promised me I wouldn’t.  Kathy tells me I’m wrong he wouldn’t have said that, get in line.  At this point my wife had to take over because inwas shaking I was so mad at that point.  She insisted we were trying to cut the line and bob would never have said to come to the side entrance.  We argued about it for 2-3 more minutes and we refused to step aside and her boss ended up coming over who ended up letting us through.

you can tell the cast memebers just don’t want to be there anymore.  You ask a question and they give you a from the script politically vetted answer.

 
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