When I said this in the other topic it was ripped apart.Hyde244 said:Of course it isn't going to be that good of a roller coaster. That is not the point of this ride.
It is a point to prove that it is still possible to build classic wooden coasters in a world of massive steel roller coasters. For that, Flying Turns is an awesome roller coaster.
Hyde244 said:Of course it isn't going to be that good of a roller coaster. That is not the point of this ride.
Snoo said:Could it be good? Maybe. Will it? Probably not.
Hyde244 said:^ Bingo.
There are simply better bobsled roller coasters. Such as, dare I say, Disaster Transport?
The greatness of this roller coaster does not stem from the ride experience. It stems from the fact that it is being built over 80 years after the first namesake "Flying Turns" wooden bobsleds were built.
We have seen this similar nostalgia with recreated wooden coaster layouts, such as various renditions of Cyclones or [Insert Name] Park Bobs.
As the movie "The Artist" won the Academy Awards for recanting black and white silent films, so too shall Flying Turns receive praise for not being new, but being a refreshing reminder.
That's cool 'en all, but this isn't a personal thing. It's made for the public. And that's the problem here. And that's what I've been saying. People have been praising this thing continuously.furie said:When something is created as a piece of personal, passionate design, it's impossible to judge it objectively.
Someone on twitter mentioned to me that "whats the difference between Flying Turns and Main Street USA, other than at least I can ride Flying Turns" and I guess they have a point.Dick Knoebel wanted to recreate it because he had fond memories of riding oen and really wanted to see one made. He had the room, money, expertise, passion and perfect location to do that
So what? Who cares? Serious question. How many visitors to Knoebles don't only care but were inticed there by that promise? I'm going to guess a tiny minority. Kneobles survives on local trade who've been enjoying that place for generations. It's unique. It wouldn't matter what the park did. And Flying Turns delayed opening might have, if anything, been good because it got people interested and talking about something they'd otherwise have accepted as "that other coaster there that isn't as good as Phoenix". At pretty much any other park, it would have been TERRIBLE PR, but at Knoebles it's not. Same with their floods. Knoebles is just weird in the first place and they make their own rules. That's awesome - but is it critically good? I'm not sure.It gives the park a "working museum piece".
Yes but, "why are Merlin's only original ideas all horror themes" - "because Candy Holland likes horror" is a common criticism on these forums, from yourself. What's the difference?It's that old "why did you climb the mountain?" thing... "Because it's what I enjoy doing..." is the answer.
Joey said:That's cool 'en all, but this isn't a personal thing. It's made for the public. And that's the problem here. And that's what I've been saying. People have been praising this thing continuously.furie said:When something is created as a piece of personal, passionate design, it's impossible to judge it objectively.
Joey said:Someone on twitter mentioned to me that "whats the difference between Flying Turns and Main Street USA, other than at least I can ride Flying Turns" and I guess they have a point.
Joey said:So what? Who cares? Serious question. How many visitors to Knoebles don't only care but were inticed there by that promise? I'm going to guess a tiny minority. Kneobles survives on local trade who've been enjoying that place for generations. It's unique. It wouldn't matter what the park did. And Flying Turns delayed opening might have, if anything, been good because it got people interested and talking about something they'd otherwise have accepted as "that other coaster there that isn't as good as Phoenix". At pretty much any other park, it would have been TERRIBLE PR, but at Knoebles it's not. Same with their floods. Knoebles is just weird in the first place and they make their own rules. That's awesome - but is it critically good? I'm not sure.It gives the park a "working museum piece".
Yes but, "why are Merlin's only original ideas all horror themes" - "because Candy Holland likes horror" is a common criticism on these forums, from yourself. What's the difference?It's that old "why did you climb the mountain?" thing... "Because it's what I enjoy doing..." is the answer.
Joey said:The difference is it's Knoebles and they can, apparently, do no wrong.
Joey said:What I first suggested this ride will probably not be that great people acted like I'd said some unholy unspeakable thing. I'm glad to see Hyde and Snoo, at least, have the same opinion though.
Is there something wrong with a coaster simply being fun? Not every coaster has be better than the last.Joey said:What I first suggested this ride will probably not be that great people acted like I'd said some unholy unspeakable thing.
Oh no, not this rhetoric again.therick311 said:Is there something wrong with a coaster simply being fun? Not every coaster has be better than the last.Joey said:What I first suggested this ride will probably not be that great people acted like I'd said some unholy unspeakable thing.