jon81uk
TS Member
Ben 10 and Buffalo would count as family coasters, not family thrill.
I haven't been to DM since Ben 10 opened, but it looks fairly thrilling. Probably similar to Spinball.
Ben 10 and Buffalo would count as family coasters, not family thrill.
A thrill coaster with a 1.4 metre height restriction would not do them any favours.
Yes it would. Both of their existing thrill coasters are terrible.
But building a new one would cost double the amount of a family coaster and would bring in half the visitors. Drayton Manor's figures prove that aiming for the family market achieves better results for them.
Drayton have aimed and advertised for the family market for years since the late 90s and even during that time, they still built Apocalypse, Malestorm, Pandemonium and G-Force. Granted yeah, I'd still be very much tempted back if they did built a good family-thrill coaster and even Blue Fire and Helix have a 1.3M height restriction. But they need a thrill coaster to headline their park.
Don't get me wrong, I'd love to see a major thrill coaster open at the park but they don't have the space or resources to develop as a thrill and family park.
They spent their 2014 development budget on the air race flat ride and they made a loss, the two years either side involved pretty small investments in Thomas Land with pretty cheap flat rides and they were both very successful years. Much as I'd like a thrill coaster it's a real no-brainer, the results speak for themselves. If it was your park would you spend double or even three times the amount on a thrill ride which was only going to attract half the visitors that a family ride would attract? Of course you wouldn't no matter how much of a fan of thrill rides you are it makes no business sense.
Don't get me wrong, I'd love to see a major thrill coaster open at the park but they don't have the space or resources to develop as a thrill and family park.
They spent their 2014 development budget on the air race flat ride and they made a loss, the two years either side involved pretty small investments in Thomas Land with pretty cheap flat rides and they were both very successful years. Much as I'd like a thrill coaster it's a real no-brainer, the results speak for themselves. If it was your park would you spend double or even three times the amount on a thrill ride which was only going to attract half the visitors that a family ride would attract? Of course you wouldn't no matter how much of a fan of thrill rides you are it makes no business sense.
I'd like to see Drayton install something thrilling, but that can be enjoyed by families.
Wooden coaster!