Universal's Epic Universe General News & Discussion | Page 382 | Inside Universal Forums
Inside Universal Forums
Inside Universal Forums
  • Home
  • Forums
    New posts Search forums Account Upgrades
  • News
    Universal Studios Hollywood Universal Orlando Universal Studios Japan Universal Studios Singapore Universal Studios Beijing
  • Merchandise
Log in Register
What's new Search

Search

By:
  • New posts
  • Search forums
  • Account Upgrades
Menu
Log in

Register

Install the app
  • Signing up for a Premium Membership is a donation to help Inside Universal maintain costs and offers an ad-free experience on the forum. Learn more about it here.
  • Forums
  • Universal Parks & Resorts
  • Universal Orlando Resort
  • Universal Epic Universe
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an alternative browser.

Universal's Epic Universe General News & Discussion

  • Thread starter Thread starter Brian G.
  • Start date Start date Aug 1, 2019
Prev
  • 1
  • …

    Go to page

  • 380
  • 381
  • 382
First Prev 382 of 382

Go to page

Mad Dog

Mad Dog

Veteran Member
V.I.P. Member
Joined
Jan 30, 2013
Messages
24,385
Location
Pittsburgh area
  • Tuesday at 11:38 AM
  • #7,621
Co@sterDuck! said:
Do we know why it was down for that long on Monday the 27th because both times it shut down that day I was in line.
Click to expand...
Co@sterDuck! said:
Do we know why it was down for that long on Monday the 27th because both times it shut down that day I was in line.
Click to expand...
Flooded from the heavy rains that day and the days before, according to a long time insider friend of mine.
 
C

Co@sterDuck!

Rookie
Joined
Nov 4, 2025
Messages
32
Age
13
  • Tuesday at 12:42 PM
  • #7,622
I was at the parks on the 27th and while I was in line they were like getting everyone out of the karts on Mario Kart BC but they were cleaning them. So does anyone know what this is because it also happen Halloween night on MIB while I was in the single rider line
 
GA-MBIT

GA-MBIT

Jurassic Ranger
Platinum Member
Joined
Jun 16, 2017
Messages
2,423
Location
Isle Delfino
  • Yesterday at 1:07 PM
  • #7,623
Walking through Camp Jurassic at IoA the other day, I was struck with the knowledge that nothing at Epic comes anywhere close to the level of theming, physical interactivity, and scale of that sub-area of the Jurassic Park land.

If you haven't been, I highly recommend it. It's one of my all-time favorite locations in any park. The Frilled Dino paddock with the water guns. The amber mines and their hidden jumpscare. The beautiful caves, with a geyser you can adventurously cross using a rope bridge. Towering rope courses. Bridges with flame torches crossing by grand waterfalls and rockwork. The incredible sights and vistas, wonderful views of River Adventure, Kong, Velocicoaster, and simply the Camp itself. There is a ton of verticality, so many paths to explore and get lost within. And every inch feels painstakingly themed and intricate. It was clearly all cared for so deeply.

I just compare it to Universal's recent work with the Shrek playground at USF, and ... there's just no comparison. The Swamp playground could be built for a well-budgeted city. It's a couple steps above the Mcdonalds Playplaces.

That was a budgeted build because of the new park, though. Clearly Epic will have something incredible to show!

There are only two equivalents. The Dragon Training Camp in Berk does its' job. It's a larger build, with a couple different playsets around and some themed figures placed around the plot. But that's just it. It's a playset. It's still in conversation with the play areas built by Fast Food chains. it's not anywhere near Camp in basically any way.

The other is Super Nintendo World's interactives, which aren't built for anyone under the age of 8 and require at least one $50 purchase to actually enjoy. And with that, everything is well-themed to the source material, but it's plastic and claustrophobic. It feels like the entirety of Mario Land can fit within the borders of Camp Jurassic alone. Only a third of that space actually being devoted to the Interactives.

IoA's designers saw the issue of an IP catering to all audiences and rose to the challenge with a huge thrill ride and an E-Ticket level play area with an exclusive ride for kids and parents, interactive elements usable by anyone of any age, a boundless footprint that would make a child feel like an adventurer, and endless care and budget put into making it feel authentic and lived in. Camp feels leagues above any other playspace I've ever seen. And that park also has If I Ran the Zoo, for good measure.

With all the budget and decades to improve design philosophies, Epic feels like a massive downgrade in these offerings. What is there to do for someone with a small child at Epic Universe? The Carousel, Training Camp, the Power-Up Band content? Essentially, the answer is nothing. I doubt Luigi, Potter, Monsters expansion will change that at all.

Even outside of small children, I mourn the loss of space. For a park named after a boundless Universe, the only thing that feels wide is the empty hub. Everything in this universe is firmly bounded. Every land feels tight and small. They feel like in the design process any Knockturn Alley or Discovery Center waterfront-style paths that might've existed were cut before construction until we were left with the most "achievable" version of these lands we could've gotten. There is nowhere at Epic that is "out-of-the-way", you are always in-the-way. Mix that with a park that encourages you to keep standing in lines and backtracking across the park endlessly to see everything, and you get a park without any depth that feels draining to experience.
 
  • Like
Reactions: HHN Maddux, Clive, greendude33 and 5 others
Mad Dog

Mad Dog

Veteran Member
V.I.P. Member
Joined
Jan 30, 2013
Messages
24,385
Location
Pittsburgh area
  • Yesterday at 1:11 PM
  • #7,624
GA-MBIT said:
Walking through Camp Jurassic at IoA the other day, I was struck with the knowledge that nothing at Epic comes anywhere close to the level of theming, physical interactivity, and scale of that sub-area of the Jurassic Park land.

If you haven't been, I highly recommend it. It's one of my all-time favorite locations in any park. The Frilled Dino paddock with the water guns. The amber mines and their hidden jumpscare. The beautiful caves, with a geyser you can adventurously cross using a rope bridge. Towering rope courses. Bridges with flame torches crossing by grand waterfalls and rockwork. The incredible sights and vistas, wonderful views of River Adventure, Kong, Velocicoaster, and simply the Camp itself. There is a ton of verticality, so many paths to explore and get lost within. And every inch feels painstakingly themed and intricate. It was clearly all cared for so deeply.

I just compare it to Universal's recent work with the Shrek playground at USF, and ... there's just no comparison. The Swamp playground could be built for a well-budgeted city. It's a couple steps above the Mcdonalds Playplaces.

That was a budgeted build because of the new park, though. Clearly Epic will have something incredible to show!

There are only two equivalents. The Dragon Training Camp in Berk does its' job. It's a larger build, with a couple different playsets around and some themed figures placed around the plot. But that's just it. It's a playset. It's still in conversation with the play areas built by Fast Food chains. it's not anywhere near Camp in basically any way.

The other is Super Nintendo World's interactives, which aren't built for anyone under the age of 8 and require at least one $50 purchase to actually enjoy. And with that, everything is well-themed to the source material, but it's plastic and claustrophobic. It feels like the entirety of Mario Land can fit within the borders of Camp Jurassic alone. Only a third of that space actually being devoted to the Interactives.

IoA's designers saw the issue of an IP catering to all audiences and rose to the challenge with a huge thrill ride and an E-Ticket level play area with an exclusive ride for kids and parents, interactive elements usable by anyone of any age, a boundless footprint that would make a child feel like an adventurer, and endless care and budget put into making it feel authentic and lived in. Camp feels leagues above any other playspace I've ever seen. And that park also has If I Ran the Zoo, for good measure.

With all the budget and decades to improve design philosophies, Epic feels like a massive downgrade in these offerings. What is there to do for someone with a small child at Epic Universe? The Carousel, Training Camp, the Power-Up Band content? Essentially, the answer is nothing. I doubt Luigi, Potter, Monsters expansion will change that at all.

Even outside of small children, I mourn the loss of space. For a park named after a boundless Universe, the only thing that feels wide is the empty hub. Everything in this universe is firmly bounded. Every land feels tight and small. They feel like in the design process any Knockturn Alley or Discovery Center waterfront-style paths that might've existed were cut before construction until we were left with the most "achievable" version of these lands we could've gotten. There is nowhere at Epic that is "out-of-the-way", you are always in-the-way. Mix that with a park that encourages you to keep standing in lines and backtracking across the park endlessly to see everything, and you get a park without any depth that feels draining to experience.
Click to expand...
We 'LOVE' Camp Jurassic, even though we're older adults and not really the target demographic. CJ is pure fun, and yes, beautifully themed.
 
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: HHN Maddux, Clive, SkiBum and 4 others
P

pumpkinbot343

Minion
Joined
Aug 12, 2021
Messages
926
Age
25
  • Yesterday at 3:43 PM
  • #7,625
GA-MBIT said:
IoA's designers saw the issue of an IP catering to all audiences and rose to the challenge with a huge thrill ride and an E-Ticket level play area with an exclusive ride for kids and parents, interactive elements usable by anyone of any age, a boundless footprint that would make a child feel like an adventurer, and endless care and budget put into making it feel authentic and lived in. Camp feels leagues above any other playspace I've ever seen. And that park also has If I Ran the Zoo, for good measure.

With all the budget and decades to improve design philosophies, Epic feels like a massive downgrade in these offerings. What is there to do for someone with a small child at Epic Universe? The Carousel, Training Camp, the Power-Up Band content? Essentially, the answer is nothing. I doubt Luigi, Potter, Monsters expansion will change that at all.
Click to expand...
Didn’t they say for the Universal park in Texas something along the likes of “This park is meant to get younger guests (like lower than 9 I think) ready for the grown up stuff (as in the “main” theme parks)”? Maybe they make it a point to not really focus on the really younger crowd for their “main” parks.
 
  • Like
Reactions: RFRees
RFRees

RFRees

Jurassic Ranger
Joined
Dec 24, 2015
Messages
1,053
  • Yesterday at 4:57 PM
  • #7,626
GA-MBIT said:
With all the budget and decades to improve design philosophies, Epic feels like a massive downgrade in these offerings. What is there to do for someone with a small child at Epic Universe? The Carousel, Training Camp, the Power-Up Band content? Essentially, the answer is nothing. I doubt Luigi, Potter, Monsters expansion will change that at all.
Click to expand...
You forgot:
  1. How to Train Your Dragon: The Untrainable Dragon
  2. Le Cirque Arcanus
  3. Yoshi's Adventure (34" so 2 years old or above)
  4. Toothless meet and greet
  5. Gobber meet and greet
  6. Mario + Luigi meet and greet
  7. Cassandra Trelawney meet and greet
  8. A dozen+ walk around characters
  9. Interactive wands at Wizarding World
  10. Astronomica splash pad
  11. Monster makeup - Correction, kids must be 5+ for this.
But you know... Nothing for small kids to do.


Most of the rides at Epic are only 40" (MoM, MK, DK, Gliders) which is 3-4 years old on average. So we're really only talking about 0-3 year olds. And I'm unsure how much a 0 year old is going to enjoy any attraction like a playground. So that narrows it down to 1-2 year olds.
 
Last edited: Yesterday at 5:03 PM
  • Like
Reactions: Brian G., Clive, ParkExplorer9513 and 1 other person
Clive

Clive

Dragon Trainer
Staff Member
Joined
May 26, 2010
Messages
7,264
  • 41 minutes ago
  • #7,627
RFRees said:
You forgot:
  1. How to Train Your Dragon: The Untrainable Dragon
  2. Le Cirque Arcanus
  3. Yoshi's Adventure (34" so 2 years old or above)
  4. Toothless meet and greet
  5. Gobber meet and greet
  6. Mario + Luigi meet and greet
  7. Cassandra Trelawney meet and greet
  8. A dozen+ walk around characters
  9. Interactive wands at Wizarding World
  10. Astronomica splash pad
  11. Monster makeup - Correction, kids must be 5+ for this.
But you know... Nothing for small kids to do.


Most of the rides at Epic are only 40" (MoM, MK, DK, Gliders) which is 3-4 years old on average. So we're really only talking about 0-3 year olds. And I'm unsure how much a 0 year old is going to enjoy any attraction like a playground. So that narrows it down to 1-2 year olds.
Click to expand...

I’ll have more to say when I get home now that I’ve experienced the park, but I think you both make valid points.
 
  • Like
Reactions: HHN Maddux
Brian G.

Brian G.

Editor-in-Chief
Staff Member
Joined
Jan 21, 2008
Messages
27,786
Location
Orlando, FL
  • 19 minutes ago
  • #7,628
GA-MBIT said:
Walking through Camp Jurassic at IoA the other day, I was struck with the knowledge that nothing at Epic comes anywhere close to the level of theming, physical interactivity, and scale of that sub-area of the Jurassic Park land.

If you haven't been, I highly recommend it. It's one of my all-time favorite locations in any park. The Frilled Dino paddock with the water guns. The amber mines and their hidden jumpscare. The beautiful caves, with a geyser you can adventurously cross using a rope bridge. Towering rope courses. Bridges with flame torches crossing by grand waterfalls and rockwork. The incredible sights and vistas, wonderful views of River Adventure, Kong, Velocicoaster, and simply the Camp itself. There is a ton of verticality, so many paths to explore and get lost within. And every inch feels painstakingly themed and intricate. It was clearly all cared for so deeply.

I just compare it to Universal's recent work with the Shrek playground at USF, and ... there's just no comparison. The Swamp playground could be built for a well-budgeted city. It's a couple steps above the Mcdonalds Playplaces.

That was a budgeted build because of the new park, though. Clearly Epic will have something incredible to show!

There are only two equivalents. The Dragon Training Camp in Berk does its' job. It's a larger build, with a couple different playsets around and some themed figures placed around the plot. But that's just it. It's a playset. It's still in conversation with the play areas built by Fast Food chains. it's not anywhere near Camp in basically any way.

The other is Super Nintendo World's interactives, which aren't built for anyone under the age of 8 and require at least one $50 purchase to actually enjoy. And with that, everything is well-themed to the source material, but it's plastic and claustrophobic. It feels like the entirety of Mario Land can fit within the borders of Camp Jurassic alone. Only a third of that space actually being devoted to the Interactives.

IoA's designers saw the issue of an IP catering to all audiences and rose to the challenge with a huge thrill ride and an E-Ticket level play area with an exclusive ride for kids and parents, interactive elements usable by anyone of any age, a boundless footprint that would make a child feel like an adventurer, and endless care and budget put into making it feel authentic and lived in. Camp feels leagues above any other playspace I've ever seen. And that park also has If I Ran the Zoo, for good measure.

With all the budget and decades to improve design philosophies, Epic feels like a massive downgrade in these offerings. What is there to do for someone with a small child at Epic Universe? The Carousel, Training Camp, the Power-Up Band content? Essentially, the answer is nothing. I doubt Luigi, Potter, Monsters expansion will change that at all.

Even outside of small children, I mourn the loss of space. For a park named after a boundless Universe, the only thing that feels wide is the empty hub. Everything in this universe is firmly bounded. Every land feels tight and small. They feel like in the design process any Knockturn Alley or Discovery Center waterfront-style paths that might've existed were cut before construction until we were left with the most "achievable" version of these lands we could've gotten. There is nowhere at Epic that is "out-of-the-way", you are always in-the-way. Mix that with a park that encourages you to keep standing in lines and backtracking across the park endlessly to see everything, and you get a park without any depth that feels draining to experience.
Click to expand...

As someone with a small child - there’s plenty to do at Epic.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Legacy
Jake S

Jake S

Webslinger
Staff Member
Joined
Feb 23, 2023
Messages
3,832
Age
33
Location
california
  • 13 minutes ago
  • #7,629
Brian G. said:
As someone with a small child - there’s plenty to do at Epic.
Click to expand...
As someone with an infant, I think there’s very little to do … but that’s pretty much true of all Universal parks. Very few all ages / no height requirement attractions.
 
  • Like
Reactions: HHN Maddux and Brian G.
Brian G.

Brian G.

Editor-in-Chief
Staff Member
Joined
Jan 21, 2008
Messages
27,786
Location
Orlando, FL
  • 10 minutes ago
  • #7,630
Jake S said:
As someone with an infant, I think there’s very little to do … but that’s pretty much true of all Universal parks. Very few all ages / no height requirement attractions.
Click to expand...

To add to that, when ours was an infant - their child swap worked wonderfully for us.
 
Prev
  • 1
  • …

    Go to page

  • 380
  • 381
  • 382
First Prev 382 of 382

Go to page

You must log in or register to reply here.
Share:
Facebook X Bluesky LinkedIn Reddit Pinterest Tumblr WhatsApp Email Share Link

Book with our Travel Partners

MEI Travel

Latest posts

  • Brian G.
    Universal's Epic Universe General News & Discussion
    • Latest: Brian G.
    • 10 minutes ago
    Universal Epic Universe
  • Kichkinet85
    My Awful Universal Orlando Experience
    • Latest: Kichkinet85
    • 14 minutes ago
    Trip Reports, Planning, & Questions
  • Viator
    Fast and Furious: Hollywood Drift coaster (Opening 2026)
    • Latest: Viator
    • 18 minutes ago
    Upper Lot/Entertainment Center
  • Viator
    Six Flags Magic Mountain
    • Latest: Viator
    • 25 minutes ago
    Other California Parks
  • Ridesandstuff
    Halloween Horror Nights 2026 (USH) - Speculation & Rumors
    • Latest: Ridesandstuff
    • 54 minutes ago
    Halloween Horror Nights 2026

Share this page

Facebook X Bluesky LinkedIn Reddit Pinterest Tumblr WhatsApp Email Share Link
  • Forums
  • Universal Parks & Resorts
  • Universal Orlando Resort
  • Universal Epic Universe
  • Style variation
    System Light Dark
  • Contact us
  • Terms and rules
  • Privacy policy
  • Help
  • Home
  • RSS
Community platform by XenForo® © 2010-2025 XenForo Ltd.
  • This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
    By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
    Accept Learn more…
Back
Top