LEGOLAND Florida is a Bad Value

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 27 เม.ย. 2024
  • In the late 90s, I went to one of Florida's oldest tourist attractions, Cypress Gardens, which at the time was just the botanical gardens. However, it was briefly converted into an amusement park in the mid-2000s and was bought by Merlin Entertainments, transforming the park into LEGOLAND Florida and re-opening in 2011. Since that point, I've been curious to go and experience the park but haven't had the chance. Well, finally that time has come and the park is... not great. For entertainment that caters to really young kids, the value just isn't there for them and the park suffers from severe capacity and operational issues, yet has the audacity to charge Orlando theme park prices. So today, we take a look at the park, discussing what I like and pointing out the flaws, which may just outweigh the positives, especially for the price.
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ความคิดเห็น • 712

  • @JonBomers
    @JonBomers 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +851

    I always wanted to go to Legoland growing up. The more I learn about it now, I have no desire to visit, despite still enjoying legos from time to time.

    • @dr.shivago2404
      @dr.shivago2404 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +52

      I actually went with some friends for my birthday as a preteen and I enjoyed it. I hear that other LEGOLAND locations could have more attractions though

    • @allieknorr5917
      @allieknorr5917 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

      It’s way better if you have little kids.

    • @bazingaeffect4155
      @bazingaeffect4155 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

      Legoland California is way better

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +42

      Lego is still an awesome product. I have way more sets than I have space for and still tons that I want to buy.

    • @CC-qx7hk
      @CC-qx7hk 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +11

      I used to go to the CA one pretty often as a kid since I lived nearby. It's awesome if you like miniature dioramas and stuff. But it's VERY child focused for the rest of the park. Then again last time I went was when the first wave of bionacles came out. That or the 2nd wave (they had a scavenger hunt around the park to get a neon green translucent mask for the toys)

  • @thebikewatcher9819
    @thebikewatcher9819 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +657

    They used to have a Star Wars section in the miniland area. It had scaled versions of Star Wars movie scenes, as well as lifesized lego builds of Darth Vader and R2-D2. They also used to have a Lego Star Wars themed store with Rey and Chewbacca. The agreement to use the IP ended when Galaxy's Edge opened, and Star Wars was removed from Legoland.

    • @edrrrk
      @edrrrk 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +40

      They also removed it at Legoland California. I used to go to that park a lot as a child, and I was very disappointed when it was removed on my visit back in 2021. I was no longer a child anymore, so I wasn't THAT disappointed since I would never visit the park ever again. But it used to be my favorite part of the miniland area.
      And it sucked even more since the big death star model only lasted 4 years there, since I saw an article that said they removed them in early 2020. The death star model was installed in 2016, so I wonder if they destroyed it or moved it into some random warehouse. if it still exists, Disney should have kept it at their lego store in Downtown Disney

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +67

      I had seen video of the old models, but yeah, it's disappointing that it's all gone. The Rey and Chewie builds are still in the park though, right outside of the main store.

    • @carminecdinoproductions
      @carminecdinoproductions 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      @@PoseidonEntertainment The Chewbacca and Rey builds should’ve been moved to the Disney Springs LEGO store!

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

      @@carminecdinoproductions They already have exact copies there though.

    • @merlinjenkins3814
      @merlinjenkins3814 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      I remember these from Legoland Windsor in the UK in the late 2000s

  • @thebup6850
    @thebup6850 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +342

    "I'm not paying that much for Legoland 4!"

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +40

      I couldn't stop thinking of RCT with the title lol

    • @LorenzoBorromeo-bb8ve
      @LorenzoBorromeo-bb8ve 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +18

      @@PoseidonEntertainmentJunior Coaster 2 looks too intense for me

    • @TokeyTheBear
      @TokeyTheBear 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

      "I already have a Lego set from Lego Stall 375"

  • @LauraBow
    @LauraBow 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +173

    There's one thing I noticed. The Lego people sometimes look like the Lego figures and sometimes look like stylized sculptures. I guess that's ok as long as it's consistent in each area. If I were designing everything I'd go for a "what if u shrank to Lego size whooaaa" kind of vibe and keep it consistent throughout the park. Or maybe in the last section of the park pull a "what of Legos were our size whooaaa" and actually have the stylized human sculptures there.

    • @coolioam8137
      @coolioam8137 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +20

      That’s a huge nitpick I have with the theming of this park. I honestly don’t like the stylized human sculptures, they look incredibly dated.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +23

      Yeah, they seem to mix in both with seemingly no reason behind the discrepancies. I guess I don't like the park enough to really care, but it's a bit strange.

    • @goodwaffleproductions8341
      @goodwaffleproductions8341 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      I've noticed this at Legoland California, too. It seems similar to the problem with Disney using a preexisting IP instead of creating something new. It appears to have started with the Land of Adventure. Since then, they have increasingly been creating “life-size legos” instead of original sculptures (which are impressive). Since then, they have added the Lego movie, Ninjago, and Chima… All with this same life-size Lego problem. Even more recently, they have replaced the Lego sculptures at the driving school with fiberglass lego figures. The charm or the lego hotdogs and signals are now replaced with cheap statues. It's incredibly unfortunate as this was the park I grew up in and to see the quality go down is just sad. I do believe there are redeeming qualitys but I'm not sure how long they will last.

    • @alaeriia01
      @alaeriia01 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I like the giant minifigures.

  • @Anime-Control
    @Anime-Control 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +81

    Kind of amusing to see the Lego Chima section re-themed into the Lego Movie. Lego thought Chima would be the next big thing and would replace Ninjago, so they were a little over-ambitious in making it a whole section of the park. Too bad that theme fell apart. Glad to see it while it was there back in 2013

    • @emperorkiron3470
      @emperorkiron3470 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      I remember seeing that giant, floating mountain in a splash zone back when I went as a kid. It was a great concept, truly too bad it never took off

    • @NSixtyFour
      @NSixtyFour 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      It's like Galidor😂

    • @mxcksrealm
      @mxcksrealm 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      and ninjago is STILL going to this day. overcome adversity i suppose

    • @choreograft
      @choreograft 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      The other reply kinda beat me to it - you'd really think they'd have learned from Galidor. Replacing the recognizable "iconic" lego looks with awkward mix-and-match generic looking characters didn't work the first time, it's actually kind of mind boggling that they'd give it another shot AFTER seeing so much success from all the classic-themed IPs

  • @VestedUTuber
    @VestedUTuber 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +252

    "Why visit such a basic amusement park when you can go to Disney, Universal or Sea World?"
    Fun Spot seems to be doing well. But the reason for that is because they have a unique draw - in particular, their hours. Universal closes very early, Fun Spot stays open late, so some people end up jumping over to Fun Spot after Universal closes. It's also in really close proximity to universal so it's convenient to do so.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +57

      It also helps that the Orlando location is just right across the street from Universal instead of an hour away. I can see Fun Spot making a nice profit if they put in some good coasters, especially an RMC.

    • @VestedUTuber
      @VestedUTuber 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      @@PoseidonEntertainment
      Well, it's right across the street if I-4 counts as "the street". But it's still within walking distance if you don't mind having to walk alongside some major arterials.
      As for some good coasters, Fun Spot is unfortunately landlocked. They recently turned their overflow lot into more park space but they're very limited overall. Also, RMC White Lightning might sound good but it would also result in the removal of one of the last three wooden coasters in Florida, and the one that's managed to actually hold up the best in Central Florida's hostile weather at that.

    • @staringcorgi6475
      @staringcorgi6475 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      However the one in Georgia has one of the most elite coasters in country almost as good as fury 325

    • @chdreturns
      @chdreturns 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@PoseidonEntertainmentRMC's are trash...

    • @choreograft
      @choreograft 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Fun Spot's always just been a solid place to stop on I-Drive (or in Kissimmee) if you're just roaming around or a local. Free parking, free admission, pay by ride, arcade, whatever. Their business model definitely works for their location and offerings. I actually thought legoland was much cheaper than this, maybe I'm remembering introductory prices from years ago. $32 for parking is absolutely egregious, even if they were in a prime location - which they aren't

  • @craigcavaliere6744
    @craigcavaliere6744 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +207

    I haven't been there in over five years as my kids have grown out of it. The annual pass used to be a great value because it included Sea Life, Madame Tussauds, and the Orlando Eye. And they would run BOGO specials on passes throughout the year. I'm disappointed to see how much the prices have increased and how much they took away.
    That aside, my kids loved going there. The staff was very accommodating and helpful. They would ride with kids if they didn't have a parent to go on with them. I hope at least that didn't change.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +40

      Ah maybe things got worse after the pandemic? It seems that most parks declined pretty drastically since that point.

    • @liamdude5722
      @liamdude5722 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Kids were just allowed to roam the park unsupervised?

    • @craigcavaliere6744
      @craigcavaliere6744 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +26

      @@liamdude5722 No. There were times when both kids wanted to ride a ride that required an adult to ride with them, but only one adult was available. So a team member would ride with one child.

    • @obeseperson
      @obeseperson 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@craigcavaliere6744this warmed my cold heart that sounds so helpful and kind of them. Also they get to ride a ride so thats cool

  • @Tiger-fv3nl
    @Tiger-fv3nl 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +41

    I've been to Legoland three times on vacation and we have never paid admission price to get in. The secret is buying the Orlando City pass. Always get to 3 day unlimited one for like 230 bucks. This past also includes the aquarium, wax museum, giant wheel, gatorland, WonderWorks and even a magic dinner show. We pack as much as we can in in the first two days and we have always made the last day our Legoland day and then we come back for the dinner show. If you look at it that way it's basically free to get in. We did the math last year. We spent a combined $500 on the passes with tax. The total value of the attractions that we did was over $1200. It's an incredible value if you use it right. Kind of like the unlimited dining at SeaWorld

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

      I never thought to look into that, but it does seem like a good deal. I've been wanting to go on the wheel again and I haven't been to Wonderworks, so it might make a lot of sense.

    • @Tiger-fv3nl
      @Tiger-fv3nl 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      @@PoseidonEntertainment yes it is a really good deal. I was wrong it is called the go City pass. There is a good magic show in the basement of WonderWorks that has unlimited beer and wine Plus really good unlimited pizza. It is included with the pass and we usually do it twice per trip. You can also get a free burger at the a&w in Old Town next to fun spot. It's actually a really good burger and I look forward to it every year lol. There is a lot included so you just have to read the fine print

  • @barelyhere7200
    @barelyhere7200 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +78

    The battle of Bricksburg use to be so much cooler. It used to be Chima themed before it was redesigned. I really don’t know anything about Chima but what I do know is that the ride felt way cooler before the redesign

    • @Acidonia150reborn
      @Acidonia150reborn 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      Why did thery make a whole ride based on a Lego Line that only lasted 3 years onpurose and one that even lego fans did not like much not much in foward thinking there.

    • @ButterBlaziken230
      @ButterBlaziken230 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@Acidonia150reborn chima ride? mid...
      mixels ride? now they would actually be cooking.
      in all seriousness those would both not be good 😂 but lego's many attempts to one up their own titan ninjago through the years are funny.

    • @PeiceofNick
      @PeiceofNick 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Im guess the fact the Chima line wasn't all that successful for LEGO had to do with the ride's reband.
      Cant blame them, the higher ups at LEGO really thought this would be as big as of hit as Ninjago was, but as they say, hindsight is 20/20

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +11

      I was actually confused because I forgot about Chima and thought that the land had been rethemed from Ninjago, so I didn't understand why a separate Ninjago land was still there.

    • @gladiatordragon9219
      @gladiatordragon9219 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Acidonia150reborn They thought Chima was going to be the next Ninjago. They dropped the ball pretty hard on that, though. They introduced a massive world in a short timeframe, built the plot around a betrayal that isn't really earned or built up, the main villain is the victim of mind control (good old mind control - for whenever you need to contrive interpersonal drama and don't want to actually write your villain).
      They introduced this giant world that they really couldn't explore fully within a reasonable timeframe and a gigantic main and side cast.
      It also released at a pretty notable time - 2013. This was the year that Ninjago concluded its main storyline with the (apparent) demise of the Overlord. This gave off the impression that Chima was supposed to be a full replacement of Ninjago - which was likely the intention, but it was far too soon.
      Quoting some guy named mrfang2 I found on a forum post while researching opinions on the topic,
      "Add together too many characters to actually care about starting out, botched morals, pissing off multiple potential fan groups by releasing at a bad time, repetitive builds with garish gimmick-overdosed “fire and ice” add ons later, and you get legends of chima. A series whose good ideas were constantly buried under strange missteps and a combination of all the major problems LEGO themes face at once."
      Plus, they built an entire world around what's basically a drug. There's an entire episode in the show where the main cast goes on a legit drug trip.
      The series died when Nexo Knights essentially took its spot, before itself being cancelled 2 years later.
      Not the worst bout of overconfidence I've seen in a product, but it's definitely up there.

  • @goodwaffleproductions8341
    @goodwaffleproductions8341 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +22

    As an Ex Legoland California ride op, it disappoints me to see how poor the operations are at our sister park. Even during the busiest times in the summer, we always strived to get the line moving as fast as possible. Our goal being get the wait time to nothing. Wish the other park had the same enthusiasm

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      The comments are full of people sharing stories about how poorly they were treated there, so it's not surprising that the ops leave a lot to be desired.

  • @quietchap
    @quietchap 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +153

    Fingers crossed that one day you’ll visit Dollywood in Tennessee someday. I personally think it’s one of the coziest theme parks despite its many thrill rides, thanks to the theming.
    However, I’d love to hear your ideas on how it could be improved, especially when it comes to dark rides

    • @VestedUTuber
      @VestedUTuber 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      "However, I’d love to hear your ideas on how it could be improved, especially when it comes to dark rides"
      What dark rides?
      No, seriously. Aside from Blazing Fury which is a hybrid dark ride/coaster, I'm pretty sure Dollywood doesn't _have_ dark rides. And honestly, it'd be kinda hard to put any in considering the park is situated in the middle of an Appalachian valley, between two very steep ridges and with a third splitting the park down the middle (The one that Wild Eagle is built on top of), and the ride would most likely have to literally be dug INTO bedrock.

    • @jordanwhite352
      @jordanwhite352 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      ​@@VestedUTuber Couldn't they just...put it in a building?

    • @quietchap
      @quietchap 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      @@VestedUTuber I agree that Blazing Fury is the only true dark ride in the park, but Mystery Mine has some dark ride elements.
      I think Tennessee Tornado is ripe for being replaced, especially with so many other, better coasters in the park. And the county fair area could also be rethemed with a dark ride. This is all hypothetical anyway XD
      Still, I’d just want an excuse to hear Poseidon talk about his impressions of the park

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +17

      @@quietchap I'm trying to go this summer, but I'm trying to find the time

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      @@VestedUTuber USH built Forbidden Journey right off the side off of a mountain, so it's definitely possible. I'm not sure if Dollywood would feel the need to spend that kind of money though.

  • @JonahTV
    @JonahTV 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +70

    What's wild is I guarantee the adult market for LEGO is noticeably larger. While it makes sense for it to *mostly* cater towards young children, that doesn't mean it has to be what I can only describe as adult-exclusionary, especially when parents have to pay a higher entry fee. They need to either utilize their own wide market, open up to a wider audience and try to capture some Universal and Disney guest cross-over (especially with the properties they have access to. The LEGO games parody the movies super well, they could probably parody the Star Wars, Harry Potter, or Marvel rides - maybe with similar properties unutilized in the region to avoid copyright and direct competition) OR they need to alter their pricing model.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +15

      The issue is that the high-spending adult market is more recent than the park. I think they realized that the architecture sets sold well, which is what got me back in Lego, and have discovered that there's a huge market for display pieces. A good handful of higher capacity family attractions could really do a lot for this park. There's no reason to open something like Pirate River Quest just over a year ago and still not have any significant capacity built in.

    • @JonahTV
      @JonahTV 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      A Lego Haunted Mansion would go hard, and some more indoor walkthrough displays and attractions would serve them really well, like Miniland World with international cities, a timeline of sets, maybe to do some stuff off of Florida history (to fit with Cypress Gardens.) Even some indoor Museum type stuff could go over well; add some kinetic displays like they have in science museums - add a robotics lab to the Industrial section. Or - hear me out - "The Great Lego Movie Ride." Just sayin'

    • @jamal202z2
      @jamal202z2 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Under no circumstances is the adult market larger than the child market it in LEGO.

    • @mxcksrealm
      @mxcksrealm 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      @@jamal202z2 you'd be VERY surprised.

    • @keekermojo
      @keekermojo 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I said the exact same thing and got my a$$ chewed and called a manchild bc the words got put into my mouth that Lego should cater to their adult fanbase. The adult fanbase is not new. The company knows this and has only recently cashed-in on it. The brand ITSELF hires "master builders" and who are those people? Adult Lego fans.

  • @jrfree88
    @jrfree88 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +15

    We took my 6 yr old nephew to Legoland last year. Personally I really enjoyed the boat/ski show. He really liked the build your own mini figure. The wait time for the newest pirates ride was at 80 mins and never dropped. Parking was expensive and they were SO SLOW.
    Great video as always!

  • @Yukendoit
    @Yukendoit 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +51

    Little fun fact about the old triple hurricane roller coaster, back when cypress gardens was park. I was lucky enough to be a part of coasting for kids. W said for every thousand dollars we raised we'd spend an hour on a rollercoaster. Cypress Gardens was the only park that said sure you could do it here. We ended up raising a little over 3000 dollars and rode the ride 85 times.
    Also congrats on the success! Great to see you succeed!

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Thanks but success for what?

    • @Yukendoit
      @Yukendoit 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      @@PoseidonEntertainment on your channel man!

  • @wemdoe
    @wemdoe 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +31

    You would think that once Disney did it, every major IP theme park with an international draw would design their rides to accommodate adults and kids. I was surprised to learn that the new Mario Kart ride at Universal Hollywood can’t handle larger-sized guests. My brother is 6’4”, big boned, and a huge, huge Nintendo fan. I asked him if he was interested in joining us to visit Nintendo land and he said he didn’t think he could ride the ride. That seems to be a bizarre oversight to still be making.

    • @caesardeharo5381
      @caesardeharo5381 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      A majority of rides a Legoland accommodate adults, although they are kid oriented rides. Still fun if you're a Lego fan.

  • @KatieGrady1997
    @KatieGrady1997 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +25

    My Aunt always wanted to take my son to Legoland. They went when he was 7 or 8. He said he felt way too old to be there, he was bored, and didn’t care for it. I think Legoland needs to expand their target demographic.

    • @SalivatingSteve
      @SalivatingSteve 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      This. I visited Legoland California when I was 10 and my whole family felt like it was way too targeted at very young children. There was not enough for the family to do together. It really limits their market reach.

  • @bimmerfan2126
    @bimmerfan2126 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +15

    best value is the Merlin Gold pass that gets you free parking, entrance to all the Legolands and Lego Discovery centers, and the water park, that you missed in this video. For about $150 you can visit multiple days and parks, which we used in 3 cities in the US so it was a fantastic value (and 10% off in the store) We would stop here for a day and then go on to Universal for a few days, or go here on rainy days vs spending a day at Universal.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      I didn't look into it, but that does seem like a much better deal. Still, I'm not going to go out of my way to get to any of those places though.

  • @gladiatordragon9219
    @gladiatordragon9219 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +49

    Fun fact - the BIG Shop is actually not counted as a Lego store for the purposes of gift cards.
    It's a charming little place. As someone who's a fan of Legos, there's still at least a little value in visiting it for me, even if I can certainly acknowledge that I've certainly outgrown its offerings. I wouldn't say no if someone offered to take me, but, thing is, I'd still rather go... virtually anywhere else.
    It's not a bad place, but I kind of wish that they'd put a bit more effort into things.

  • @carsonlord9083
    @carsonlord9083 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    I think a really interesting part of Legoland is how they cater to school groups. There's a building in Duplo Valley and Heartlake City dedicated to hosting school groups and even spots in the Imagination Zone where coding classes are taught.
    I also think you should've touched on the Imagination Zone with it's ways for kids to learn certain physics and interact with lego in new ways.
    Overall Legoland is a little bit of an educational park i think

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Imagination Zone didn't seem to be open when I was there. Perhaps I was wrong, but I didn't get the impression that it was open to anyone, even when I walked directly by it.

  • @iconicnzz6414
    @iconicnzz6414 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Awesome video, as always! I work at Legoland California and have gotten to meet a lot of staff from our sister location in Florida! But this video really highlighted some stuff that I didn't know about the park, like the history with Cypress Gardens (and I'm REALLY jealous of those Miniland awnings).

  • @bartplays3392
    @bartplays3392 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +23

    What a coincidence that I was watching videos about Legoland Florida last night and then the goat posts a video this morning about it 😂

  • @diegeticfridge9167
    @diegeticfridge9167 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +29

    No clue why but the editing, music, and narration in this video all remind me vividly of “living with the land” Love it!

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

      Imagine watching this video while riding Living with the Land

  • @555bunnies
    @555bunnies 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I went to this park for my birthday and as a big fan of lego, it was really fun! I don't regret it at all and I had such a great time with my family. It was definitely one of my favorite and most memorable birthdays. The builds at the park are very impressive and theres a lot to see. Yet I totally agree with you, as an adult myself going for my 18th bday, I really noticed how much this park was specifically aimed at younger kids, I often felt like I was too old for a lot of what was offered. Even for teens I would say this is an issue. I also had to endure a huge wait for the dragon ride, it was especially overwhelming because of all the children screaming around me... despite this though, I loved my experience there. I did stay at the legoland hotel and I will say that the staff was super kind. The hotel also offered daily building demos where we would get to follow an expert in building a small creation which we'd get to keep afterwards, it was a really neat little thing. The hotel had great food at the pirate themed restaurant and the themed rooms were very charming. My brother and I also got very into the minifigure trading aspect of the park. Overall, I'm really glad I was able to visit, I'd only really recommend this place to kids or huge lego nerds like myself but I found it to be a great time ^_^

  • @pipipipi9223
    @pipipipi9223 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +11

    I used to work at a different location and the turnaround on staff was crazy. People would work there for 2 weeks before quitting mainly due to workload and *other* issues. I have a lot to say after working there and I would not work there again.
    Our biggest complaint was indeed the ride times, especially so on peak days during summer break, but rides would constantly be down, especially new rides. One of them even broke down on opening day and didn't reopen for the rest of the day. I wasn't a part of the rides and attractions team but I heard a lot of horror stories from them.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  15 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Not surprising. I haven't ever heard a good thing about Merlin

    • @pipipipi9223
      @pipipipi9223 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@PoseidonEntertainment I wish they would do better as their parks have so much potential, and for kids, it's probably their first theme park experience in some cases, but unfortunately, I feel like it's always profit over experience. Since I left, they've almost raised the price of entry by nearly $10 but haven't added much in return. It's honestly kind of sad to see.

  • @ukaber7227
    @ukaber7227 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I really appreciate how much you want to give things a fair shot. Absolutely love your videos hearing about stuff I used to experience as a kid.

  • @borisguy1986
    @borisguy1986 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    As a kid it was so bad. I remember so many people cutting in line and have zero memory of ever enjoying anything from that park.
    It was a terrible and boring experience.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Line cutting was a huge issue during spring break. That also contributed to why the lines were long.

  • @spaceemperorspar4791
    @spaceemperorspar4791 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Once again want to say that I love your channel. New videos from you are a pretty much instant-watch. I actually visited Legoland that same March, but thankfully I somehow managed to dodge MOST of the crowds you mentioned, as the waits I experienced seemed to be in the middle of your two visits. Nevertheless, my thoughts on the park largely ended up in the same place as your own

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I felt that the week I went was probably abnormally busy. I went on a Thursday, the park closed at 6, so I figured it wouldn't be busy, but it was crazy.

  • @xeno_mania
    @xeno_mania 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Your video is helping me get through a sick day... Thanks for all you do!

  • @What_the_Pell
    @What_the_Pell 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I went to the original one in Denmark in 2018 and it was on a whole different level then the other ones. Great video as always and I like seeing some legoland videos.

  • @LegendofRelda
    @LegendofRelda 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    My family used to vacation with my grandparents every year in Florida and my 11th birthday present (2011) was to go to Legoland Florida and I was super excited to go. Roughly last minute my dad researched a bit more and realized that I was probably out of the age range for it and instead got a killer deal on Universal tickets.
    I was still a little too timid to go on Hulk or Dragons, but the 3 days we did across the two parks were paramount to starting me down the path to my theme park obsession. Forbidden Journey and Spider-Man were mindblowing to me and still are to this day, and getting to experience a lot of the original UniStudios attractions before they closed by the time I got back in 2014 is something I cherish.
    Needless to say, I’m glad my dad picked Universal despite promising something else initially. The only thing I knew was there was Harry Potter and maybe Jurassic Park, but I was just blown away. I want to get out to a Legoland eventually, but it’ll probably be when I have a kid of my own, because wherever there’s a Legoland there’s a ton of attractions I’d rather do instead.

  • @Randomness5050
    @Randomness5050 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    What a great video (as always!). Thank you for the time and effort.

  • @user-gj3fp4pg2m
    @user-gj3fp4pg2m 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    youtube didnt notify me that you've uploaded but im very happy you did! this video was great as always :D

  • @skycreeper0173
    @skycreeper0173 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    That was really fun to watch! It is disappointing to hear that the operational part of this park struggles to do well with high capacity. And yeah, Legoland has some good rides if you know where to look for them.
    Frankly, I haven’t been to Legoland California in over 6-7 years, but I had a ton of fun being there. I find it interesting how most attractions from California are present in Florida with some unique rides in there (the wooden coaster, the lake pirate ride, the Florida specific models from Miniland, and the cypress gardens).

  • @wdwexploreandchill
    @wdwexploreandchill 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

    I’ve been saving this to sit down and watch! I grew up around there and Cypress Gardens was a big part of my childhood. I still go with my mom and we like the old garden section the most…I’m glad that they preserved that so well.

  • @dennisd9804
    @dennisd9804 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I love LEGOLAND Florida and grew up with LEGOLAND California, so I'm disappointed to hear about some of these negative developments as of recent.
    I am a huge fan of "The Dragon" as it was one of my favorite coasters as a child; definitely agree regarding Vekoma's strengths there. Lost Kingdom Adventure is great as well.
    Coastersaurus in FL is strong, especially compared to the CA counterpart. Miniland is awesome (I love Bok Tower Gardens)!
    Pirate River Quest is a nice attraction as well.
    Thanks for the detailed analysis as always, Poseidon!

  • @jimt9245
    @jimt9245 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +18

    Thanks for the tour! Having only gone to the Carlsbad park, there are a lot of the same attractions at this one too. But since this was built on the foundation of Cypress Gardens, it may warrant a visit at a decent price, which is below it's cost.
    Never thought the park was great for the rides, but it allowed me to see my kids react to things at their scale. Lots of great memories on low capacity weekdays. With the lack of crowds we could walk on attractions and give the kids longer leashes. We invested in annual passes one year and dropped into the park in different seasons. Bric O Treat was a perhaps the best seasonally overlay, but nothing on the level of Disney or Knotts.
    Other than Miniland - Legoland seems to miss an opportunity engage older Lego enthusiasts. Like a Lego Build Vacation.

  • @erickent4248
    @erickent4248 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

    I have been to this park 3 times once in the mid 80s when it was just Cypress Gardens, the gardens were immaculate at the time, there were beautiful women in hoop skirts, a high diving show and synchronized swimmers. It was great. When I went back the second time it was before Legoland, but the gardens were more overgrown, the ski show was worse than in the 80s, but there were animal displays everywhere with Florida animals, much like at Homassassa Springs, a really cool electric railroad display and a good live show with singing, as well as the janky carnival style rides and the wooden coaster (which was pretty fun at least then.) As Legoland other than the some of the lego city builds much of it did not appeal to me at all. At least the gardens and the ski show still exist, but the gardens were even worse than the previous decade, things that were super cool to me as a kid, like the Florida shaped pool that Esther Williams filmed in, were grown over and it was sad to see.
    Cypress gardens for me 80s > 90s > 2010s and I can imagine in the 50s and 60s during its heyday it was even better. But I was not alive for that.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      The pool definitely seems to be maintained, although maybe that's because they put a "Redbeard" figure at the end for the River Quest. The gardens are still nice but lack the variety that they've had historically.

  • @Volcanron
    @Volcanron 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Crazy seeing a video on this park. I went to it technically a week before opening via some AARP promotion that my aunt got us through somehow, and even at 10 years old I thought it was terribly young for a park. Granted they didn't have areas like Lego Movie or Ninjago at that time, but even then ride times were exorbitantly high and what I was able to do felt very childish. As for the Lego store in the park, I enjoyed it but felt that it would just be better to visit the one in then Downtown Disney.

  • @lizw8663
    @lizw8663 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Great video! We had been talking about a day trip to Legoland this year after becoming fans of the TV show LEGO Masters. So glad we didn't end up wasting a day/our money on this park!

  • @SherlocksLeftNipple
    @SherlocksLeftNipple 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +43

    Honestly, this sounds much like how the original Billund location operates. The actual park is mostly meant for families with younger kids, but adds value for older family members by tacking on add-on admission to the neighboring Lalandia indoor waterpark as part of its resort packages. It's a bit too expensive for my liking these days, but a pretty solid holiday for families, who want something more chill than the big thrill ride parks. That's actually the charm of the Legoland park, which keeps people coming back, I think. It's not a park, which demands you plan your entire day around it - you can go in for an afternoon with the kids, then go back to your cabin/hotel room and eat or grill a chill meal - but that's built on the expectation that the crowds aren't huge.
    And it seems like they built this park to Danish crowd numbers, which are significantly smaller overall. Hell, a lot of the rides shown here, I recognize from my own childhood visits to the Billund parks nearly 20 years ago! The Dragon, The X-treme coaster, the "singing founfain", the water attraction at 23:22, the firetrucks, and the 'driving school' are all exactly the same as the ones found in the original Danish park. They weren't built to handle capacity, they were built to entertain the 1,7 million people, tops, who visit the Danish park year-on-year. That's peanuts compared to the numbers even the dinkier American parks sees, nevermind Disneyland or Universal. Little wonder the rides aren't up to US crowd standards, when they were built for an insular Danish market in the early 00s.
    There's definitely room for improvement and a need to adapt to their location/unexpected level of success, but I also think it's kind of cute that I can recognize Danish park design so clearly in a park so far away. Legoland Billund, Sommerland Sjælland, Djurs Sommerland, Bakken, Tivoli, and BonBon-Land all share a lot of these characteristics - open to nature, small square-footage, much more centered around families having a picnic in-between rides than packing the place full of expensive rides, smaller ride budgets overall with a stronger emphasis on theming to make up for it - basically, going for a hyggelig time, rather than trying to be some kind of frontrunner competing on who can have the greater value. I see why Legoland purchased this park - the botanical garden is such a perfect compliment to the "relaxing hygge-day with the family" approach they're used to from back home.
    It's clearly not your cup of tea, but families absolutely eat this up. Even if it's expensive, even if it gets a bit boring for the adults, it's a family-holiday destination, which lets you sit and breathe, while the kids run off to ride something. No Disney Genie, no fast-passes, no planning around mealtime reservations, no stress, no bullshit. Just you, a box of apple-fritters, and a sick Lego recreation of Florida locations to admire. Simple, easy, functional.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      I see your point, but the park opened under Merlin. Don't they not follow this kind of model either? It seems that they copy and pasted those attractions over a re-skinned park without taking into consideration the kind of crowds they would generate. With the hotels, Peppa Pig park and now the aquarium, they're definitely trying to pack the park with the Orlando market

    • @SherlocksLeftNipple
      @SherlocksLeftNipple 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      @@PoseidonEntertainment Oh, I'm not disagreeing with you. I was just saying all this looked super familiar to me, and that the park being more popular than you or the owners expected isn't surprising to me. Legoland brings in a certain crowd, who's often looking for something that a more thrill-intensive park doesn't provide.
      I agree that the owners cheaped out. You're 100% correct that copypasting large parts of an existing park created for a much, much smaller crowd of people onto an American park isn't a very good idea, and that the rides have wait time issues. If Legoland Billund is crowded, I remember the wait on some of the rides I mentioned being about 20-50 minutes on average, which wasn't ideal. Even less so, as I grew older, and some of the rides simply weren't an option anymore due to age restrictions. Had Merlin been smart, they'd have R&D'd these 20+ year old rides to combat that known issue with the park they were copying, but if they weren't expecting huge crowds, maybe they just didn't think it was necessary at the time? I'm a casual park fan, so you probably have a better idea of that than I do. Definitely a huge flaw that they need to straighten out, if they care about guest experience going forward. Especially, if they want to attract more people to the park. Three hotels and plans to expand their offerings suggests they do, so, yeah, time to start investing and adapting this park to suit its own audience's needs.
      TLDR; Your criticism is valid, I mostly just wanted to point out that I found things very familiar from back home, that the root of their park design issues might stem from a foreign market's much smaller demands, and that there's definitely an audience for this sort of park out there, who'd prefer it to a more flashy park like Legoland's bigger Floridian competition. I don't disagree with you on Legoland's design flaws. It's present in the original park, too, to a less critical extent. They mostly fixed it by partnering up with Lalandia over here. Maybe the Florida park will copy that, too? lol

  • @mikeperez8
    @mikeperez8 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Slightly different take for me. My kids are 8 & 4 and they LOVE Lego land. Main reason, NO LINES!! They were able to ride everything multiple times with a max wait time of about 10 min. I do agree, that anything older than 10, might not enjoy it as much.

  • @politiekhistorie
    @politiekhistorie 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    Although I haven't visited this park, I have visited Legoland Denmark which offers a lot of the same experiences. We were very hyped as the park was often massively advertized when we were kids but indeed it's very lackluster. I liked the flying theatre though but other than that my experience was similar to yours: expensive for what it was and a few fun rides but not worth a long wait.

  • @WhomstActual
    @WhomstActual 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Hello. Local Florida man here that lives right next to this place and grew up next to it. We very much Miss Cypress Gardens which was like a budget Busch Gardens.
    Even if you like Legos, Legoland is one of those things that if you go once you've already seen everything. I dated a girl that loved going to Legoland a lot and after about the third time I felt like I knew every corner of the park.
    She even used to work there for a time and used to talk about how in the meetings they would talk about how they need to copy Disney and do things to Disney way which is very odd considering that's like a very small restaurant trying to copy Chick-fil-A operations

  • @CaityE
    @CaityE 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

    as a huge fan of lego ninjago specifically, going to legoland is really only worth it when they're doing their limited time events. their ninjago days events are absolutely magical to me, even as an adult fan, and those are the only days i find it worth it to travel all the way down. as for any other day at the park its not really all that and it feels very empty compared to the events, which is quite unfortunate. its like legoland is solely relying on its seasonal events to draw people in and provide a majority of its entertainment.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  15 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      I wasn't aware that they were doing events, but I agree, it sounds fun.

    • @CaityE
      @CaityE 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@PoseidonEntertainment it’s kinda funny, the events are usually scheduled exclusively for the weekends. if you went during the middle of the week you would never even know anything was happening

  • @heartracing4you
    @heartracing4you 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I went to Legoland back in March for the first time and it was awesome!! My favorite part of that trip was the lego ninjago show, I was pretty much the only teenager who took part in the show during the trip. And tbh, I didn't regret it 1 bit!! And the Lego Movie section is amazing!! I love the dog! And the "where are my pants" joke!

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I was completely unaware of a Ninjago show. Where even is it? I didn't see any space to perform a show like that

    • @heartracing4you
      @heartracing4you 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @PoseidonEntertainment it's basically a act, there are theese performers and a Floyd costume and they are giving instruction to the kids (and me) how to nail different types of ninja moves

  • @bjvincent8786
    @bjvincent8786 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Great video I got to visit Old Cypress Gardens in the late 70's and mid 80's; it was before it was reborn as Cypress Gardens and then Legoland Florida. I guess if the kids enjoy Legoland with their family the same way I enjoyed Cypress Gardens with my family that is all that matters in the long run.

  • @gorfelbt
    @gorfelbt 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I went to this as a kid. It was awesome going back in 2013, and it was one of my highlights at florida. I remember it fondly, and loved it all. But I was a youngin at the time, so I only remember faint things, until I found photos from the trip.

  • @zaroatmeal3494
    @zaroatmeal3494 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    It's crazy because I grew up in Winter Haven right down the road from Cypress Gardens, and I loved CG. And I always wanted to go to Legoland Cali and was so excited when it was announced. But gosh was I disappointed lol

  • @wispisang
    @wispisang 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    One of my most memorable experiences from this park when I was younger was being stuck on the adventure mummy ride for like an hour and having to be eventually evacuated off of it. First ride I ever had to evacuate. I also have vague memories of enjoying the water park and going to the very first halloween event they ever held, me and my siblings enjoyed it. Though in recent years me and my family went back to the park when they were having this big discount day just to experience it once more and yeah, it didn’t age great. Though I can still see a kid really enjoying it.

  • @annikki73
    @annikki73 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Oh man, I remember Cypress Gardens in the 80s! Best memory i have from there was the two, adorable tiger cubs they were leading around on leashes. Why the heck CG had tiger cubs, I don't know, but I had pictures of them!
    Speaking of Florida theme parks and tigers .... anyone remember Circus World? :)

  • @basementdwellercosplay
    @basementdwellercosplay 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I thought I had been to Legoland but the timeline and location you gave didn't make sense with when my family went to Orlando. You then mentioned the Disney's Legoland store, I googled it and yep that's what I went to, I remembered the sculptures. Surprised it opened in 2011 considering I thought it was a around when I was a kid

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I think that particular Lego Store has been around since the late 90s at least. It was a lot cooler before the Disney Springs refurb.

  • @danandtab7463
    @danandtab7463 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    I've only been to Cypress Gardens, but just looking at the map when it opened, this "new" park looked like a reskinned Cypress Gardens. I feel like the Lego brand deserves something at the level of the Super Nintendo World, at the very least.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      Yeah, reskinned Cypress Gardens is a good description. It does appear that the park has a lot more trees and landscaping than the original did though (outside of the actual gardens themselves), so that's a positive development.

  • @barbaraday7662
    @barbaraday7662 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    We went to that legoland twice, one in 2015 and again in 2018, second time we stayed at the hotel. My kids were small but we had a blast. Not sure if things have changed that much but we enjoyed the lego sculptures and all the rides. The horsey heartland one is very novel and fun to ride over and over. At the hotel, the pool with floating Legos was definitely where we spent most of the time.
    This is a place to use your creativity and imagination, it seems that many people have lost that nowadays.
    I will say it was pricey but definitely worth it imo.

  • @killkor5
    @killkor5 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I used to work there for a few months in 2023 and the being unprepared for large crowds is an understatement, they basicslly always run on a skeleton crew, barely having enough employees to get by each day and usually consisting of part-timers, the turnover rate is so high they have hiring events every 2 weeks and hire about 20 people each time, the training is pretty lackluster, and you basically learn as you go, getting a promotion is either impossible or the easiest thing ever depending on how many employees they have at the time, some rides go down for a few days straight, there was a ride after Lego City and before the water park that got shut down due to a lack of traffic because it was so out of the way, they removed a bridge in Cypress Gardens to let the boats pass for Captain Brickbeards Boat Ride, and the Lego Movie shop has no Lego Movie sets due to them being discontinued, theres even talk that they'll soon remodel that area.
    If anyone has any questions ill answer to the best of my ability

  • @markrogers5944
    @markrogers5944 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The multicolor water slide that was at cypress gardens was swapped by merlin to Thorpe park in uk,they got the technic coaster from legoland (Windsor another Merlin park) in return.
    Only rode the technic coaster when it was at Windsor with my kids as had real long que s.
    Got removed due to noise complaints from nearby residents from kids screams.merling added a Perspex box rear folding lid on last 2 seasons to mute noise but that then killed throughput per hour.
    The legoland hotel now sits in its place.
    The water ride that Thorpe part got is now called storm surge,nice ride in nice weather but not a British spring or winter ride.

  • @davidzagrodny9486
    @davidzagrodny9486 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    Our kids loved Legoland in Carlsbad (California) when they were younger. Legoland had a special $15 "home school day" price, offered a few weekdays during their off season. It a fun park for younger kids, but we never would have visited without this significantly discounted price.

  • @carminecdinoproductions
    @carminecdinoproductions 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I’d love to see an outer-space themed indoor LEGO theme park called “LEGO Space Central Galactic Theme Park” perfect for the LEGOLAND Resort as a true LEGO-themed second gate instead of the one non-LEGO themed one that’s themed to a certain kids’ IP that I don’t wanna mention or maybe a LEGO-themed third gate for the LEGOLAND Resort with an other-space theme along with another LEGO-themed theme park with a dinosaur theme or maybe a standalone indoor LEGO theme park located elsewhere in Florida!
    LEGO Space Central would feature multiple themed sections including the LEGOLAND Space Discovery Center (the main street with lots of retail and dining locations), the LEGO Space Station (the hub with plenty of retail and dining locations and some attractions and some spokes that would lead guests to through the space portals to different sectors), Sector 1 (featuring some rides), Sector 2 (also featuring some rides), Sector 3 (also featuring some rides), etc.!

  • @vanvorst1999
    @vanvorst1999 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    When I was a child in the 70s, my family would come to Cypress Gardens regularly for the garden boat ride and ski shows.

  • @wplays4271
    @wplays4271 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I coincidentally just went to Legoland Billund today, and I honestly had a blast (as a 17 year old Lego fan). A lot of the rides from Florida are also in the Billund park, like the Dragon and Masters of Flight. So the parks are quite comparable. But it did feel like there was way more care put into it.
    First off, the Aquarium and Peppa Pig land (which was actually based on Lego Peppa Pig, instead of just the normal version, making it already feel higher effort) were both included in the ticket price, so they are a lot less greedy with pricing
    But I also felt that unlike you said in your video, the people working there are genuinely having fun.
    I went to the haunted house, but before I was let in. The employee needed to check if “I was tall enough” (I’m 1,90 meters). He lifted the measuring tool far above my head, and said “sorry, you’re not tall enough. I’m going to have to eliminate you”, and pulled a fake gun on me.
    Stuff like that just really makes the experience more fun, since the people working there look like they really enjoy their job.
    Even if the rides are a bit mediocre compared to Disney, Universal and my personal favorite: Efteling. It was just plain fun to me

  • @TufteMotorsport
    @TufteMotorsport 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I love the dragon! I went to Legoland Denmark on my 30th birthday with my friends. The one in denmark is simmilar, but better as it is buildt from ground up as a castle. Florida seems like it repurposed from an old track. You should check out videos from Legoland billund, especially the pirate boats. It is a darkride like PotC, but with lego characters from the sets.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      As far as I'm aware, The Dragon was custom built for Florida, but I do agree that it "feels" repurposed.

  • @TheZackofSpades
    @TheZackofSpades 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I enjoyed this e-tour way more than expected! If I have small kids in a few years that really like Lego, I will try and shell out to give them this experience.

  • @OtherVio
    @OtherVio 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Oh man. I grew up going to Cypress Gardens frequently as a kid, and worked there when it became Legoland. It's a DAMN shame they didn't choose to go the water park route during the 00's as I think that actually could've saved them. None of the locals had much interest in the Adventure Park, as it was simply too hot most of the time for a rather basic theme park, and it certainly didn't draw in tourists. But once the water park opened, we- and many others- went ALL the time as a fun way to cool off. Unfortunately I think that was built far too late to save them, as I remember it closed not long after.
    The lack of upkeep for the gardens themselves also depresses me quite a lot. It used to be so beautiful, but it's clear Merlin Entertainment simply does not care about it. I wish there was some way to properly section it off from the rest of the park and build a separate entrance (which would be difficult due to the park's layout). I think if they maintained the gardens and even put a little cafe up front, it would do great in a place like Winter Haven. Especially with all the retired people that live there, haha.
    Also, although I haven't visited them personally, I constantly heard that the other Legolands were superior to the one in FL. It seemed like this was because those parks were built by the Lego Company themselves- however, the parks were sold to Merlin in the 00's when Lego was on the verge of bankruptcy. Merlin chose the cheap route and bought a preexisting local theme park which was never anything big, gave it a new coat of paint, and charged higher prices for the Lego theming. I think we had annual passes for the first year and stopped going after that. I was actually there on opening day.
    ...And then years after that, I worked there a few summers after school. You mentioned the lack of care from the employees- not surprised. We were treated terribly on all sides as well as vastly underpaid. Higher ups loved to blame the lack of profit on us rather than the park itself, made us stand outside in the sun for hours on end, we had angry customers yelling at us for the low quality of the park versus what they paid (and they were correct!). It was an absolutely miserable experience all around. I remember working 12 hour shifts during holidays. We were only allowed two 30 minute breaks the whole time.
    Oh, also, you were "lucky" and it doesn't seem like it rained any of the days you went. You know how Florida summers are with rain- rain would actually shut down most of the attractions in the park, which lead to even more angry tourists as there already aren't too many attractions to begin with. Imagine being an underpaid teenager in that kind of environment, it was brutal. The other employees were usually older people only barely scraping by. I hated it.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I think it's easy to conclude that Merlin is just awful. I don't know if I've ever heard a good thing about them, whether from working for them, or being on the guest side of things.

  • @Joseph-oo7pp
    @Joseph-oo7pp 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I remember going a couple times when I was younger, and only Miniland USA and the Mummy dark ride were really enjoyable to me.

  • @GLJosh
    @GLJosh 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Near me home we have a Lego Discovery Center about $25 a person for 2 rides (Kingdom Quest-basic shooter dark ride and Merlin's Flight pedal bike), a 4D theater, a Pirate Play Area, numerous build areas, and some walkthroughs. Most of the times we have gone there it was busy, most rides would still take about 10 minutes due to very slow loading. We went over Spring Break and couldn't do the rides the lines were close to 45 minutes each. We did the majority of the building and walked past Kingdom Quest to still see some of the same people in line. Oh, and the line was going back into the previous walkthrough attraction. My daughter just turned ten and has pretty much outgrown that location, but still loves building with Legos. Most of the time we just find a build spot and build for about 30 minutes. The saddest thing is that they have a build your own minifigs area in the store, with less options and a higher price point than the Lego store in the mall about 1 mile away.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Yeah, Merlin just isn't great lol. I've heard that the Legoland parks were much better when it was actual Lego that owned them.

  • @Pikminer-5087
    @Pikminer-5087 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I did get to go to Florida during Spring Break in I think 2011 or 2012, and this was one of the places I got to. It's great to see this park again, but I'm not sure if I would go back now that I'm in my early 20s. Maybe for nostalgia's sake someday, though.

  • @jaball77
    @jaball77 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    As someone with a 5-year old and an emotional attachment to Cypress Gardens, LLFL hit the sweet spot for us for several years. It's only 45 minutes from Tampa, my kid loved the Lego stuff, especially The Dragon and the Lego Movie Ride. I loved the ski show and Miniland, and we all loved staying at the on site hotels! There's build activities, interactive story time, a treasure hunt in your room with minifigs as prizes, great pools, etc. It was awesome. BUT, this was back when you could buy an annual pass for $99 and get a room in the Pirate hotel for $150/night. Since then they've TRIPLED their annual pass prices to $299 and hotel rooms are routinely $300+ per night, sometimes as high as $600! This Spring break, a single day adult ticket to LLFL was MORE than a single day ticket to Magic Kingdom. Bonkers. It used to be a great regional park that was a good value, but now they're trying to charge Disney prices for a Fun Spot caliber park, and it's just not worth it.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      The pricing is just insane for the experience. I want to like it, but I was mad that I even had to pay twice to make the video lol

  • @PsRohrbaugh
    @PsRohrbaugh 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Around a decade ago, there was a promotion where you got a free ticket to Legoland after purchasing a $20 ticket to see the Orlando soccer team play. You still had to pay for parking, but I thought that was a reasonable price. My buddy and I went, had a few beers to get a small buzz but be safe to drive home, and we had 3 - 5 hours of fun in the park.
    I distinctly remember my friend and I saying "for $20 - $50 we could do this every year or two". Then we saw the ticket prices and almost fainted. Even back then it was over $100. Yeah we like Lego but not that much lol.

  • @vast9467
    @vast9467 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    when i was younger, chima was my favorite area (alongside technic)
    still sad to hear it was replaced

  • @HenshinHead
    @HenshinHead 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I know this doesn't have much to do with the problems you went over in the video, but I did have a chance to visit Cypress Gardens a few years before the ill-fated Wild Adventures takeover. Certainly a far cry from the bigger, newer parks a couple of hours away, but it made for a nice half-day experience. One of the smartest things Legoland did when it took the property over was holding onto the actual botanical gardens at the heart of the park, but one of the biggest mistakes it made was not preserving more of the original park. Even Wild adventures tried to keep alot of the older attractions around, mostly building out or replacing newer attractions that weren't bringing people in.
    The old Cypress Gardens were almost like a time capsule -- not just of the different eras of Florida history that it used to celebrate -- but of the different eras in Florida tourism. You had the luxury gardens that were dug out of the swamp, the waterski shows on Lake Euphalie, defunct attractions like the train ride and the Island in the Sky, and the themed areas that were meant to act as a living history museum. Almost all of that was demolished or rethemed to fit with the typical Legoland fare. And despite buying up a bunch of the surrounding property and almost quadrupling the size of the land, capacity issues are worse than ever and there's somehow *less* to do if you aren't a kindergartener.
    Seems to me they could've taken a cue from what was there before and kept some of the shows and older, slower attractions that the whole family could've enjoyed. Or the historical attractions that schools in the area used to take fieldtrips to see. Even if they still glued faux lego brick facades to everything, leaving more of those original attractions in placed would've at least given some local color to Legoland Florida and made it distinct from the other Legolands open at the time.

  • @rocksreviewsreactions337
    @rocksreviewsreactions337 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    We had a lady from our church, who works at Legoland, she gave us free tickets to Legoland and we went their at least 5 times in a span of several years from 2014-2017. I am biased, since we didn't have to purchase the tickets, and my brothers and I were huge Lego fans when we were young, but all 5 times we went there I enjoyed every bit of it. Yes, there are a few young rides that were too small for us, but the big rollercoaster and all the Lego stuff we bought were WAY worth it.😀

  • @nathan.d.c
    @nathan.d.c 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I went back when it opened. it was fun, I was pretty young and loved all the builds. just wish they approached it better. and had more for AFOLs.
    trading Minifigures is a blast though. got some really cool (and some quite rare) pieces from it

  • @lenaMoon-om8om
    @lenaMoon-om8om 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    We always went to Lego land for home school field trips because they have school days where kids get in for free, which was always nice

  • @paulsworkshop4179
    @paulsworkshop4179 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    We did this park when our kids were younger, about 7 years ago. It’s great for what it is, a park for young kids who love Lego. Wait times were long and it rained. I wish the mini land had a canopy back then. My kids still have the Drivers License they got there.

  • @Stubbsusa
    @Stubbsusa 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    We went last July and agree with your perspective. We ended up getting rained out of most of the day and got a rain check but it has so many blackout dates that it is probably not usable for us, as out of towers.

  • @AmusementVision
    @AmusementVision 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I got to go here twice in the early 2010's and I have to say as much as I love this park, they really seem to be going in the wrong direction, especially with capacity as you mentioned in the video. The park actually used to have a really good people eater attraction called Island in the Sky which was very similar to Sky Tower over at Sea World, but they closed it down back in 2017 for some reason and left the area abandoned. I also think they shoud've looked for an empty spot for the Lego Movie area as it actually replaced the former Chima section and while it wasn't the most popular, it really did not help with the wait times by replacing it from what it seems. I also do have to say I wish they found a way to keep that Star Wars area in Miniland, it was one of the coolest parts in that section of the park. Also the pricing to go there is just horrible now, it was extremely reasonable the first time I went, but the second it got past 100, it got to the point where it made more sense to even go to 2 Disney parks over there. Great video!

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Apparently the Island in the Sky received some sort of extensive damage. I've been on it plenty of times as part of Cypress Gardens and it's disappointing to see it removed. It's such a unique ride system and the only other place that I know of that still has one is Efteling.

  • @arcanenomen
    @arcanenomen 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I actually use to work at Legoland as a chef, I will say the behind the scenes of Legoland Florida was alright, I was there during the canopy construction for Mini City (2021ish). I think Legoland has really sold out and isn't fun like before, management fell apart in recent years and many good employees left during 2021, Legoland NY had just opened and we had trained some higher ups in the the resort kitchens. I would highly recommend going to Bok for lunch though! I also worked in the Cafe at Bok and they have excellent food and service!
    Edit: Say hi to Rachel and Julian at Bok's Cafe if you go by. Say Ash sent you. 😉

  • @painful-Jay
    @painful-Jay 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    19:43 growing up in Orlando, I remember going to Cypress Gardens many times in the late 80’s-early 90’s with my horticulturist Dad. It was usually boring besides the boat skiing shows.

  • @TheShape063
    @TheShape063 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    You are the only channel that I have notifications on for because of the consistent high-quality of your videos and your well thought out opinions as well as your thorough coverage of these parks. I was super excited to see you on For Your Amusement podcast and I hope people found your channel. I hope the thoughtless move made by Watcher Entertainment didn't hurt your channel in any way.

  • @NeedyBoBeedy
    @NeedyBoBeedy 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    thank you for bringing this to my attention, we were planning on going to lego land for my brother’s birthday at the very end of may

  • @just-another-lunatic
    @just-another-lunatic 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    This really reminded me of Legoland Germany. It has almost all the same rides and the same atmosphere, but also the same issues, being (with one exeption) mostly for kids and having really long waits even on stuff that is not really worth it.
    But it has two additions that can be interesting for adults: a well themed log flume in the adventure area and some big robot arms with seats on it that jolt you around at one of 5 intensity levels, which is really out of place, since even level 1 you can only ride if you already to old for half of the other attractions.
    I only been there two times. Once in the perfect age, once a bit to old. The first time was great. The second time though... it was definetly one of these moments when you realise that something is not really that good as your child brain made you think it was. Most of the stuff was boring, underwelming or you had to wait far to long for it.
    The Miniland was impressive, but (at least at the time) it was in the direct sun and it was hard to enjoy them, cause even in Germany the summers are to hot to stand there very long. They also looked very sun-bleached and not that well maintained, especially compaired to how the Miniland in the video looks.
    The employees also could not be bothered, but I do not blame them after seeing a young wowan have to stand in the full sun on a wasp steamrolled slushy station a whole day.
    Also, for a european park, the attraction/giftshop ratio just was not right, especially if you consider how expensive Legosets can be (some would call them overpiced). I mean if an, at the time, 13 year old notices this, you should at least try to hide your greed a bit better.
    It was fun while my blissful childishness lasted, but now I rather go visit my weird but very good local park or take the two hour drive to Europapark.
    Also, the Dragon in Legoland Germany had a little accident with 31 slightly ingured people, due to human error, take that as you want.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      That's an interesting experience. I'm surprised by how standardized all their parks appear to be.

  • @tinypizza4278
    @tinypizza4278 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Compare this to Alton towers, Chessington world of adventure and Legoland Windsor, which are probably the 3 most visited of Merlin’s parks in the UK. Both Legoland and ATR have a SeaLife aquarium and CWOA has SeaLife Chessington and Chessington Zoo included in the price. Also in the case of Alton Towers, if you stay onsite you get your choice of accommodation, Breakfast and a round of Mini golf. You do have to pay for admission to either the theme park or water park which is automatically calculated for the amount of days you’re there and gives you the option to use a hotel guests only entrance

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I didn't know that was the case, but yeah it seems like a better deal.

  • @folfielukather8083
    @folfielukather8083 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    i operated mr freeze at st louis, its a fairly complicated ride to operate, theres 2 side each with 1 train, theres one person on each side, one in the middle, and one in the box, it requires 3 people to move a train and launch it, fathersday is the craziest day of the year, everything has over an hour wait, but we kept mr freeze under a 40 minute wait time, we only needed 2 rows of the extended queue, half the day we were only on one train, it helped that the ride was short, but that extra time was used on loading, we managed to get people on and off fast and still entertain many of the guests, we kept load times around 45 seconds
    there really isnt an excuse to have poor load times in moderate crouds

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Sounds impressive, definitely better ops than what I saw at Magic Mountain

  • @zionox688
    @zionox688 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I was there opening day back in 2011. Being a LEGO kid it felt absolutely amazing, but despite having been a good few of times since it’s never really given that same level of excitement. Of course part of this comes with age as I was nine when I first went and so a lot of the rides and activities were more appealing. While I still find the models fantastic there sadly isn’t much I can do as an adult, though maybe when I have kids of my own that will be remedied. Here’s to hoping they add some more intense rides and over all higher quality experiences.

  • @briansieve
    @briansieve 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Lots of memories visiting Cypress Gardens in the 70s with my great grandma and beloved great aunt. I realize now, they needed a rest day between Magic Kingdom Days

  • @charityrochford2175
    @charityrochford2175 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

    We’ve loved our visits to the park! For a family staying in the hotels, spending days in the park, and having time to actually play with Legos, it’s a great experience!
    There is a lot to enjoy if you know the Lego lines, who the characters are, etc. you can stop by and watch the 4D films, ride the rides, meet characters, watch the amazing water stunt shows, enjoy the interactive theatrical shows, experience a build class, and all the special event fun they have going on during the weekends.
    The restaurants in the hotels are also amazing! It’s worth a stay in the hotel if you happen to have someone in your family that really loves LEGO! It’s a great place to let yourself feel like a kid again!
    I also have to commend them for their attention to children and families with special needs.

  • @lampshade7189
    @lampshade7189 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Glad someone finally made a video on this place 😭, it’s just been going to far down hill over the year. Sad to see

  • @Photo0021
    @Photo0021 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I'm thinking about going back since I haven't been since I was 9. (I was there at soft opening too I'll add!). Looks like a lot hasn't changed and a lot has, might be interesting.

  • @Deoxys911
    @Deoxys911 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Funny how just yesterday I was thinking, "I know it's more for young kids, but surely it would be worth checking out at least once as someone who appreciates Lego sets and creations." Good timing to help me be better informed!

  • @toddbendall518
    @toddbendall518 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    While I agree that the rides took a long time to load, as a father of kids, here's a couple of things that we noticed. One, we really appreciated the play areas inside of the queues. They turned a long wait into more play time. Two, something we noticed is that Legoland at itself up as an autism friendly center. And lastly, since Emmett's Flying Adventure was our daughter's favorite, we got to ride it a few times. The story is that they are having a contest. Shortly after starting the contest, the Duplos and other forces from the Sistar system attack, and you spend the rest of the adventure trying to avoid them. It has more of a storyline than Soarin'. It also has three different levels, being a triple decker couch. Overall, it isn't as inspiring as Soarin', but we think of it as the energetic younger brother.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Ah, I definitely thought I was missing something in the story

  • @Cheezbat
    @Cheezbat 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Great review of the park. I have enjoyed my visits to the park…but I have only gone when it’s slower. I couldn’t imagine waiting 60 minutes or more for their rides and attractions. It is one beautiful park though.

  • @generalforsythe3944
    @generalforsythe3944 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I remember being there back when the Chime water ride was there. my favorite part was holding water at the end of the ride to shoot at guests leaving the ride. I was a little shit.

  • @leftfinned
    @leftfinned 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    ok, hear me out on why I LOVE Legoland Florida. I have taken my kids now not quite 15, to Legoland Florida every year between ages 6-12. We originally went for just a day after a wedding in Orlando. They were little and wedding are boring for kids so as a treat we went as a little add on. We stayed in the Legoland hotel and have at some point stayed in every type themed room in the original hotel except friends themed, we stayed one time at the beach resort across the way(our least favorite by far) and we stayed once right as pandemic was lifted slightly in the pirate hotel. What originally was a treat for twin 6 year old boys ended up becoming our go to vacation for several years. We’d stay up to a week each time and have amazing memories from the times there.
    Now, let me explain why I personally think we enjoyed it so very much (keep in mind I personally LOVE Disney world, Universal, and Kennedy space center, but I won’t throw a single penny at seaworld with those orcas in captivity)
    I was traveling with twin boys with sensory processing issues who loved legos as much as I do as their Mom. As Floridians we bought annual passes even though only going for a week which gave us discounts on the hotels and worked out to save us money in the long run. They would not and still won’t ride coasters at all, and it took years for them to even get on a dark ride at all. We never waited more than 15 minutes for anything that I can remember and often walked onto or close to walked onto most things. The crowd levels were amazing and there was something just awesome about walking literally next door from hotel to the park. It was worth its weight in gold when as a single parent traveling with littles to be able to so easily go back and forth throughout the day without getting on a bus, boat, or other transportation.
    As Lego fanatics we all loved the builds, and I loved the mature and beautiful remnants of the cypress gardens landscaping. We would go to the water park and rent a cabana for the day at least once during the week, and sometimes would just swim in the pool, go to the big Lego store and buy something to build in the hotel room later in the evening. It makes for a very chill and truly relaxing theme park vacation vibe compared to others.
    The hotels are themed to the max and have a separate little nook with bunk beds, a building table, and a second tv for the kiddos-which made the room feel roomier than most and the theming was super cute and we all loved it.
    A second big benefit for me as a parent was not worrying about finding meals that super picky eaters would enjoy. At the Legoland buffett there is a huge variety of food that ensure adults appetites, and picky kids appetites are easily satisfied at the same meal together.
    The water ski show was amazing when they did it dressed as Lego mini figs, but it didn’t return after the pandemic. I actually asked about it as it was so cute- but they said water skiing in those huge costumes was simply getting too dangerous. I can understand that-but it was super fun.
    We always had a great time, and as a parent I could relax and we could all have fun even though it was definitely not a high adrenaline type of trip in the slightest.
    Since the pandemic, we have traveled to Kennedy space center to see a launch and we LOVED KSC! It’s fun educational and in a cool area.
    The last two years we have gone to Disney world. I’ll never forget one of my kids the first time in magic kingdom with the waves of people and lines etc asking me “do you think this is fun?”. They still don’t ride coasters or really much at all and are good sports about it because they know I love Disney. The truth is that if we had a dog sitter we’d probably still go to Legoland here and there. We can bring our dog to Disney (for a price) and not to Legoland … I don’t know. I guess for the right audience and personality types who aren’t really looking for big thrill rides this park is amazing. Being able to go to the water park and live it up in a cabana was fun and as Lego fanatics we loved it.
    It’s fair to say it caters to younger kids, but also to less adventurous, and was a really fun trip for us for years.
    I definitely agree that if you are older and a thrill ride enthusiast, perhaps this isn’t your park. (That banyan tree though is worth seeing at least once- it’s just magical. )

  • @joshwagner4134
    @joshwagner4134 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Went to legoland about 5-10 times throughout elementary /early middle school, before the hotel, Chima/Lego movie area, and a few other newer attractions. Granny apple fries were always great and food in general was always nice. Wish they had shade at Miniland USA when I was there, it would be rough in the summer.

  • @ugaldk31
    @ugaldk31 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Thank you for another great video! I live closer to Legoland than Disney, and I also have a mild Lego addiction. But this has shown me how I can better spend my money. Always excited for the next video! Keep them coming! Appreciate you!

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Might as well just buy another set instead of going to Legoland lol

    • @ugaldk31
      @ugaldk31 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@PoseidonEntertainment absolutely!!

  • @SinKillerJ
    @SinKillerJ 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Having been to Nagoya in recent months, be glad mini land is covered. It was quite yellowed and filthy in the open air. Maintenance was definitely lacking overall in Nagoya, which was shocking given the country it's in, so I would say you got the better experience.

    • @PoseidonEntertainment
      @PoseidonEntertainment  15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Oh no, the models in Florida were absolutely destroyed by the weather. I suppose the covering was installed to mitigate further damage, but the bricks were all in really poor condition.

  • @car_tar3882
    @car_tar3882 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    LEGOLAND would be great with a few more dark rides as I find the flat rides such as the firefighter thing to be quite interesting though it may be better capacity if made into an Omni mover.

    • @VestedUTuber
      @VestedUTuber 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      LEGOLAND would be great with more ride variety in general.

    • @car_tar3882
      @car_tar3882 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@VestedUTuber I think the park being themed to Lego puts in a good position to compete as there are so many established stories and it’s probably easier to build a large Lego man than a large realistic human animatronic.

    • @VestedUTuber
      @VestedUTuber 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@car_tar3882
      Oh, definitely. LEGOLAND's theming is great (although the non-LEGO parts of it tend to get worn out quickly. Merlin Entertainment tends to cheap out on materials whenever possible). It's just that they're lacking in the ride department, particularly with stuff aimed at more than just young kids. Honestly, something like Dollywood's Blazing Fury, themed to firefighting in LEGO City, would be a great pick for this, and that would fit both a Dark Ride slot and a "fun for the _whole_ family, not just the little parts of it" slot.

  • @isaacdieringer1792
    @isaacdieringer1792 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Lego land Florida had a deal on certain days for a homeschoolers discount. We got the whole family (6 people) in for $50 when it would have cost at least $350 normally. I don’t know if they have the deal anymore but it was awesome!

  • @jeffallen7417
    @jeffallen7417 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I just visited the park for the first time last December. They have inherited a mess of a layout and the hyper-stylized map does not help. You hit the main points right on the head with this video. My dad and i agreed that taking my niece and nephew in a few years would be the right age group for the park.

  • @salty1355
    @salty1355 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    That wooden coaster traumatized me as a kid... from some angles it looks like it's just a small loop, but then it actually goes through a much larger section since it is like an infinity sign kinda shape (outline wise). So my parents thought it would be a good first coaster for me, who hates coasters, and then instead of being a small little loop it did everything else.

  • @OsuMelon
    @OsuMelon 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    $119? and with that expensive parking? ouch.. it's around ~$45 for one day at the one here in denmark. i'm surprised such a park manages to get by in a place with florida, so many great parks there already with what i'd think would be far greater appeal. the scenery does look nice though. nice video🙂.