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Thursday, October 03, 2024
Flyover Las Vegas attraction review: better than Disney's Soarin'
attractionsmagazine.com: Flyover in Las Vegas is an attraction that will be very familiar to you if you’ve ridden Soarin’ at Disney parks. But this flying theater experience is better in a few different ways.
I’ve been on Soarin over California before when I was younger and it was the older version in Disneyland. I think it’s my mom’s favorite ride and she likes it for the reasons the article said the Las Vegas version is better. However I think the Las Vegas version sounds really cool and the “improvements” they made make it sound like a very intense experience. I think the biggest problem with the Soarin is as they article mentioned the bent buildings when you’re sitting anywhere but the middle sections. I think the differences don’t make one better than the other I think they just make the rides more suited for the context of their expedience. Soarin is theatrical—it has terrifying CGI animals and flashy transitions and ends with tinker bell leading you over Disneyland because it’s target audience is children and families. The one in Las Vegas is for adults and attraction seekers paying $40 to experience the ride once who want a fully immersive realistic experience.
I’ve been on Soarin over California before when I was younger and it was the older version in Disneyland. I think it’s my mom’s favorite ride and she likes it for the reasons the article said the Las Vegas version is better. However I think the Las Vegas version sounds really cool and the “improvements” they made make it sound like a very intense experience. I think the biggest problem with the Soarin is as they article mentioned the bent buildings when you’re sitting anywhere but the middle sections. I think the differences don’t make one better than the other I think they just make the rides more suited for the context of their expedience. Soarin is theatrical—it has terrifying CGI animals and flashy transitions and ends with tinker bell leading you over Disneyland because it’s target audience is children and families. The one in Las Vegas is for adults and attraction seekers paying $40 to experience the ride once who want a fully immersive realistic experience.
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