If Sainsbury's don't mop a spillage up and an old lady slips, is seriously injured and the company faces a multi £million fine as a result, you're not being too harsh on the company if you go in and do your shopping a few years later expecting milk and bread to be on sale.
But the Smiler crash is besides the point, this is about the future direction of the park. The discussion is around whether the corner is being turned and the park is facing a bright future or not. It's a response to the glimmer of positivity some regularly seem to have and why they feel that way. Likewise, if you're like me and feel that the glimmer of hope you had at the beginning of 2021 is disappearing, and discussing why you think that's the case. As a bit of a glass half empty miser, I'd love it if my posts were thrown straight back in my face in a few years time.
It just feels like any progress they're making is 3 steps forward and about the same amount backwards to me at the moment. There's examples of new coaster hardware and Duel being kitted out being mentioned a lot.
But Alton Towers isn't just about 3/4 rides is it? Why is food getting worse? Why are the hotels now extortionate and shambolic? There's no progress on closed outlets. After Retrosquad were dumped in, there's zero progress on permanent flats. There's very little progress with upkeep and theming maintenance and what does happen is pretty poor. I'm no gardener, but some parts of the gardens looked like a jungle last season. The Rapids are an embarrassment. Walliams World is an embarrassment. Granted some of these need some serious long term planning. But some are quick wins and some are being made worse by conscious decisions some of which are being made right now, here in the present. Yet Horizon, as excited as we all for it, is going through planning first? My main concern is that the park will continue down the road of chucking something new and shiny up to draw them in every few years and the rest of the place can go to hell. That's what's happened for the last 2 decades as we've seen the park slowly but surely downgraded over time.
That's what happening now isn't it? Or am I wrong to think that?
I think it depends on whether you view CAPEX investments into the ride lineup itself as more important or the other things on the side as more important.
Personally, the way I see it is that rides are ultimately Alton Towers' bread and butter, so my excitement about the CAPEX investments outweighs my disappointment with some of the not-so-good things that have happened.
Besides, you say about these CAPEX investments being the park "chucking up something new and shiny every few years to draw people in", but in my view, it is worth noting that two of the upcoming CAPEX investments are large-scale refurbishments/rethemes of existing rides rather than new major CAPEX investments; only Horizon fills that particular role.
The Curse at Alton Manor is a long-requested refurbishment of Duel that appears to harken back to the ride's roots somewhat while also presenting its own unique take on the concept designed bespokely for the 21st century guest. While it is being marketed as a "new" attraction to ensure that it draws people in, it is a significant investment into an existing attraction that appears to simply adjust the original concept for the modern day without any obvious "gimmick" or USP. It is also a significant investment into a non-coaster attraction, which many have been yearning for; while The Curse at Alton Manor is a retheme of an existing dark ride rather than a brand new one, it is still a significant dark ride investment, and if it is done well, it could provide a very valuable asset to Alton Towers' non-coaster ride lineup.
The Nemesis retrack is another instance of this. Rather than being a flashy new attraction, it's a case of the park rejuvenating a much-loved headline coaster and making sure that it's fit to thrill generations to come. As with The Curse of Alton Manor above, I would say that while it will likely be marketed as a "new" attraction to draw people in, it is a significant investment into an existing attraction that is likely to simply adjust the original concept for the modern day without any obvious "gimmick" or USP.
I do think that the Duel and Nemesis projects are not to be sniffed at. Both projects are substantial renovations of existing attractions without an obvious USP behind them, which I'd argue is a good sign. I can imagine that that would have been a very tough sell for Merlin a few years back.
While Project Horizon is a new, shiny attraction, I do think that it is an understandable investment, and it appears to be filling a long-unfilled void within Alton Towers' lineup. An indoor coaster should be a really valuable addition to the park to help bolster its all-weather lineup, and it would offer something very different to anything else currently at the park. Also, I do understand the timing behind it; by 2025, 7 years will have passed since Wicker Man opened. That's a long time to go without a new major draw.
In terms of the ride-related things that haven't currently been covered that you mention, such as flat rides and the Congo River Rapids, I think that these will all be covered in good time. You were never going to get an instantaneous solution to the flat ride issue, and with the upcoming CAPEX, the park currently has its hands very full up to 2025.
I'd argue that the projects being built now were of high priority and needed to happen now for various reasons. Duel was widely seen as problematic, and I'd argue that it was an easier nut to crack for a refurbishment than something like the Congo River Rapids. Nemesis likely couldn't last much longer without a retrack, so the refurbishment needed to happen now. 7 years is a long time to go without a major new draw, so kicking Project Horizon down the road for too much longer could have caused issues.
Besides, I'd argue that things are happening to help solve the problems caused by the flat ride issue. Sub-Terra reopening could well have a similar effect to the installation of a new flat ride; it is a new filler attraction, after all!
I also see the events as a real positive. While they're not really my thing, the park have expanded the events lineup immeasurably and also increased opening hours, which I'd argue to be a really good sign.