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Paultons Park: General Discussion

I think your feeling on price point may partly depend on demographic.

If you’re a young family going to Paultons, I imagine you get a lot of value out of it. The park is tailored most towards young families, and if you have kids below 1.2m in height, I dare say there isn’t anywhere better suited to your demographic in the UK than Paultons. Peppa Pig World is expansive, and the likes of Storm Chaser, Cobra and Pterosaur provide what is likely the strongest UK lineup of family coasters below a 1.2m height restriction. For that young family demographic, Paultons is incredibly solid.

But if you’re an older family with kids above 1.2m or 1.4m, I think the park is quite expensive for what it offers compared to others in the UK. People can talk all they like about low queue times and such, but I think Paultons is currently somewhat lacking for older families in comparison to some other parks in the UK. I think the cries of “90+ minute queues” at Merlin parks is an exaggeration, as the number of days on which this actually occurs is very, very small and limited to an isolated number of super peak days (e.g. October half term during the Halloween events). The queues at Merlin parks are mostly a lot more manageable than some make out, in my view; outside of peak periods, queues much above an hour are quite rare, from my experience. And if you’re an older family, I’d argue that the likes of Alton and Thorpe have more to offer than Paultons.

There are a lot of advocates of Paultons’ pricing style on here, but I do wonder if it may serve as a barrier to their growth in the years to come. There’s a very fine line between “paying for quality” and “expensive rip off”, and I think there’s only so much people will tolerate Paultons raising the prices to maintain low crowds before they start to crack. Eventually, I think the park will have to accept that some days will need to be a bit busier if they wish to grow.

I’m not saying that the “sell them cheap, pile them high” model is one for the park to aspire towards, but I do feel that they could be pricing some people out at present, and there could be potential for them to grow more into the older family demographic if they were a tad less expensive.
 
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But if you’re an older family with kids above 1.2m or 1.4m, I think the park is quite expensive for what it offers compared to others in the UK. People can talk all they like about low queue times and such, but I think Paultons is currently somewhat lacking for older families in comparison to some other parks in the UK. I think the cries of “90+ minute queues” at Merlin parks is an exaggeration, as the number of days on which this actually occurs is very, very small and limited to an isolated number of super peak days (e.g. October half term during the Halloween events). The queues at Merlin parks are mostly a lot more manageable than some make out, in my view; outside of peak periods, queues much above an hour are quite rare, from my experience. And if you’re an older family, I’d argue that the likes of Alton and Thorpe have more to offer than Paultons.
I don't have any experience on the 'family' part, but I go to themeparks in the UK with a group of adults, and we all ended up liking Paultons a lot (although of course, as you say, it varies for demographics!). I've been to merlin parks more often certainly, because they are cheaper, but I much prefer the experience of Paultons because it has such a different atmosphere. Merlin parks are overwhelming (to me) even when the queue lines aren't 90+ minutes, it's very taxing sensory wise. Paultons has a lot of rides and I guess it depends what you consider thrilling, to me I thought storm chaser was very thrilling! But I realise I'm probably in a minority there. Personally I feel the price is justified just on the experience difference alone, it's a much more managable day out fo me. I guess it really depends on what people like in a park!
 
The queues at Merlin parks are mostly a lot more manageable than some make out, in my view; outside of peak periods, queues much above an hour are quite rare, from my experience

Most people can only visit in peak times, be it holidays or weekends. Almost without fail whichever Merlin park I visit there are at least 40-60 minute queues. I’m sure the queue data sites will confirm this.
 
Most people can only visit in peak times, be it holidays or weekends. Almost without fail whichever Merlin park I visit there are at least 40-60 minute queues. I’m sure the queue data sites will confirm this.
By “peak periods”, I’m referring to times like Halloween where it gets really busy. By my experience, an “average” weekend at a Merlin park does not see queues much above 60 minutes very often, and certainly not “60+ minute queues across the board” like many on here sometimes like to make out.
 
By “peak periods”, I’m referring to times like Halloween where it gets really busy. By my experience, an “average” weekend at a Merlin park does not see queues much above 60 minutes very often, and certainly not “60+ minute queues across the board” like many on here sometimes like to make out.
I agree - but only on the proviso that pretty much all rides are running and at near to full capacity, which hasn’t been the case a lot in recent years. Certainly seems better so far this year though (barring the opening weekend)
 
Please can I remind everyone, after having to remove a few posts, that discussion should be constructive and not along the lines of “I know something you don’t”.

If you happen to have been lucky enough to ride Ghostly Manor already or know something new about it, then please feel free to share if you’re able! Otherwise, it’s best advised to keep such things to yourself.

Thanks.
 
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