Honestly that is the brilliance of these immersion-focused attractions like Harry Potter Worlds at Universal Florida and Hollywood, Star Wars Theme Park at Disney Theme Parks and now Mario Theme parks. You need to be there to experience it.
An entire park dedicated to Nintendo! * the equivalent of Main Street USA would be dedicated to the original NES, with shops dedicated to: the original Super Mario Bros., SMB3, SMB2 (the international version), and Dr. Mario; Duck Hunt; Tetris; the Legend of Zelda and Zelda II -- The Adventure of Link; Excitebike; and Golf (with room for expansion). * the biggest land will be themed to Mario (further subdivided into sections dedicated to the main Super Mario theme, Mario Kart, Mario Party, and Mario Sports) * a Pokemon land * at the resort would be a facility similar to ESPN's Wide World of Sports Complex, themed to Wii Sports and Wii Fit * a Legend of Zelda land * an Animal Crossing land * the centerpiece would be themed to Super Smash Bros., with a rotating schedule of nightly battles * a Donkey Kong land * a Kirby land * a game show based on Brain Age * a world class kennel for guest pets, themed to Nintendogs
And as スラルカ said, land is expensive. After that, the park cannot be expanded because there is only a large factory area and the sea around it. To expand, the last parking lot needs to be removed. Cars area 0.0486km^2 SNW(JP) area 0.02km^2 Translated at DeepL Japanese→English
I don’t think I’ll bother waiting in a long queue for this when it opens in Hollywood. Hopefully it’ll at least draw some crowds away from Forbidden Journey and Jurassic World.
The problem is you are suppose to see the AR through both sides of the glasses with your eyes not one side and a camera lens. I don't think the footage posted will ever look like it does on the ride. For me just looking at the videos, the Ar side lets it down in general. I would have preferred the current physical sets and track layout and it be a shooter at targets just at a faster pace (even double its current speed) as it goes around with some track elevation changes up and down and some banked curves for rainbow road. Example - No AR glasses. - A group of 8 vehicles / two tracks would dispatch and be switched from pit land onto the starting grid. - 3,2,1 GO! - All 8 vehicles set off allowing you to shoot at targets, baddies, coins, power ups, the other vehicles etc as you move along at a decent pace moving through the scenes. The cars don't change track or pass but you collect points as you go. - The group of 8 vehicles reaches the half way point of the circuit the next group of 8 cars are dispatched to the starting grid. 3, 2, 1 GO! And repeat. - When the first group come back around they bypass the pit stop station area and continue along the track completing another lap. Only then when they cross the finish line after the 2 laps will they be switched from race track and return to the pit station area for end of ride.
@@Banjo_Tails that’s not a bad idea at all, but I think they wanted to go all out with the AR. I’ve heard people say it’s really convincing and it gives a great sense of speed and gives a lot of character to the ride. Guess we will have to ride to find out!
@@coolioam8137 It's on the to list. I am waiting for Donkey Kong to be done and Fantasy Springs area at Disney Sea so ill have more to experience on my next trip to Japan.
The rule description says that each person gets a trophy if they exceed 100 coins, and I believe that if almost all 8 guests exceed 100 coins, they get a trophy!
I really wish I could go here but at the same time my roller coaster brain is so frustrated with this dark ride. Like my brain is like bro what if this was a roller coaster. The theming would be perfect with a launch coast omg. Something fast like Maverick at Cedar point would be awesome. Sadly I’ve heard theres not a lot of trust when it comes to roller coasts in Japan. Idk how true that is but this ride would be x1000 better as a rollercoaster.
I've seen a couple of these videos now, and the one thing that impresses me the most is how friendly and outgoing the people who work there are. They provide the magic that would otherwise be lacking.
I always feel like I'd rather go to the Japanese theme park rather than the future one in my country, because not only are the staff amazing and really trying, but even just the public people walking around seem so happy to be there and involved and courteous to each other
@@Garother just remember, there's a lot hiding behind that "public face" you see - japan has a big long list of problems, too. i guarantee you there's some japanese person somewhere wishing they lived wherever you are currently. grass is always greener on the other side
@@gi_nattak hey, if they get paid at least minimum wage, that's way better than doing crappy retail jobs in the US. Plus, working inside the Mario land is one of the decent rewarding perks for many college kids. Also, Japanese theme parks are actually physically demanding for staffs; you may see them simply greeting guests, but they are also doing other rotational tasks within the park attractions, as well as help navigating people during the evacuation and such.