This is the copy and paste response to guests complaining about it:
The way this is worded and if they go ahead with fully removing 3D, it comes across that they don't care about the guest experience.
I wouldn’t read too much into that. Those responses are made in a vacuum and meant to be as chalk as possible to get through the quickest legal/marketing review they can. The actual thought process behind the decision probably had 0 impact on what the wording of that response would be.
This just isn’t true, but since I really have nothing to back that up I’ll just say that while I agree this is an objectively bad move, there’s no reason to not just sit tight and wait and see what happens after the “test” is over/after Epic opens. If it’s a permanent change, then we’re in trouble. If it’s a way to get a quick injection of cash (to help showcase more of Creative’s upcoming handiwork and talent), then trust that Universal is picking a ride that will have a lesser impact on the overall guest experience (regardless of how the super fans, a slim minority of daily paying customers, feel about it).Universal views Kong far closer to a Potter/Spider-Man/Mummy than a "lesser" attraction. Kong is a headliner (we can argue about the quality all day, but Uni sees it as an E-ticket).