By the co-author of The easy Guide to Your Walt Disney World Visit 2020, the best-reviewed Disney World guidebook series ever.

Available on Amazon here.

(As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)





Category — u. The Wizarding World of Harry Potter

Review: Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter

I’ve checked out Hogsmeade at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter multiple times, most recently in November. This page is one of several reviews of Hogsmeade, which include:

REVIEW: HARRY POTTER AND THE FORBIDDEN JOURNEY

Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey is the signature attraction in the Hogsmeade component of The Wizarding World of Harry Potter, in Universal Orlando’s Islands of Adventure.

It has attracted many gushing reviews and at least one unrealistic and cranky one.

The truth, for most, will be somewhere in between.

Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey deploys state-of-the-art theme park technology to create a stunning queue, and a mostly marvelous attraction.

However, in some ways the technology isn’t supported as well as it could be.  In other ways, the designers got a little too excited by the technology itself.

The upshot is that for most people the ride is a “don’t miss” if you are at Universal Orlando anyway.

Hogwarts Castle Hogsmeade Wizarding World of Harry Potter from yourfirstvisit.net

However, for first time visitors to Walt Disney World, I would not take a morning out of a Disney visit to see the Forbidden Journey of Harry Potter unless your kids just won’t give you any peace otherwise.

THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY OF HARRY POTTER AND THE FORBIDDEN JOURNEY

Many reviewers have called Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey a combination of Epcot’s Soarin and The Haunted Mansion.

I get the comparison–the ride has projections of images like Soarin, and physical environments with scary figures that recall, in a much scarier way, the Haunted Mansion.

But the better comparator at Walt Disney World is the Animal Kingdom’s Dinosaur.

  • Like Dinosaur, the ride is powered by a motion simulator–in the case of Forbidden Journey, a quite advanced one.
  • Like Dinosaur, cool and surprising audio-animatronics emerge, sometimes when you least suspect it.
  • Like Dinosaur, the overall story of the ride is very thin, and simply an excuse for a sequence of vignettes that don’t tie to or build on each other.
  • Like Dinosaur, the ride vehicle is so much so the real star of the ride that it calls too much attention to itself.
  • And like Dinosaur, if you are at all subject to motion sickness, the ride will be one of seemingly unending misery.

The experience begins with the queue itself.

Once you get in to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter, and into Hogwarts Castle, dump your stuff into the lockers on the right.

(You really need to do this, as the ride vehicles have storage for, at best, a pair of sunglasses, wallet, and phone. Nothing bigger than a glasses case will fit.)

You then enter the queue, first outdoors, and then in a greenhouse that is not quite as steamy, even in June, as one might fear.

Then you go back inside the castle, and the magic begins.

I’m not gonna give away any spoilers, but the quality of the experience of the waiting line for Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey is far, far better than anything else in the theme park universe.

This queue itself is almost the price of entering Universal Orlando.

(Do not use the single rider line until you have experienced the main queue. The queue really is so good that it is worth the hour or more of extra waiting.  The single rider line is best for return visits to Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey–not your first.)

At the end of the queue, you strap in to a four-person bench.  There’s a mock-up of the bench before you enter the Castle–if you are concerned, test your fit. (Riders of Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey also have to be at least 48 inches tall.)

Then you are off!

The ride–and again, I’m not gonna give away details, because as in all such things, the mystery of what happens next is a big part of the fun–begins with projected images, then moves into physical spaces, and varies back and forth between the two environments.

The problem is that the projected images are not well done, and the physical environments seem poorly paced.

I’m not sure what the issue is with the projected images–too slow a data rate?  Not enough time spent on animation? Regardless, my first thought, on seeing the first image, was “that’s really blurry and thin on detail.”  This is the case with later projected images as well. Not a great first impression.

The physical environments are much easier to look at, and sometimes quite fun.  However, the pacing through the physical environments is not well matched to the pacing of the images (you move too quickly in the projected areas, and it seems that you move too slowly in the physical environments), so the reaction becomes not one of marveling at what is present, but rather wondering what’s next.

Meanwhile, your ride vehicle is zooming around, sometimes in accord with the action, but often quite purposelessly.

For those with cast-iron stomachs, the zooming is fun, although at times a pointless distraction from the rest of the ride.  For those with moderate or higher degrees of motion sickness, the zooming will get old very fast, and re-present itself as severe discomfort.

To compare the potential for motion sickness with Walt Disney World, I’d put it between Dinosaur and the orange side of Mission: Space.

  • If you can take the orange side of Mission Space, the Forbidden Journey of Harry Potter will pose no problems at all.
  • If Dinosaur feels like the outer edge of your capability, seriously consider avoiding the Forbidden Journey.
  • If Star Tours or the Tower of Terror is too much for your motion sickness, then absolutely avoid the Forbidden Journey.

Note that even if motion sickness is an issue for you, the queue is still very much worth seeing–go through the queue, and then bail before boarding the ride itself.

Universal Orlando is a place for thrill rides, and the technology deployed at Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey creates the opportunity for a very cool, very thrilling simulation of wizarding flight.

That said, flight simulators are famous for making people upchuck.

In my view, the designers have dialed up the zoom too intensely–perhaps because the quality of the projected images is so poor, and the physical environments too slowly-paced?–and, as a result, have left too many of their audience on the runway.

June 29, 2010   9 Comments

Review: Dragon Challenge at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter

I’ve checked out Hogsmeade at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter multiple times, most recently in November. This page is one of several reviews of Hogsmeade, which include:

REVIEW: DRAGON CHALLENGE AT THE WIZARDING WORLD OF HARRY POTTER

Review - Dragon Challenge at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter from yourfirstvisit.netDragon Challenge is a world-class roller coaster at Universal Orlando’s Islands of Adventure, in its Wizarding World of Harry Potter–Hogsmeade area.

You need to be at least 54 inches tall to ride it.

It’s been around for a while under the name of Dueling Dragons, but was slightly re-decorated and re-named to better fit in with the rest of the Wizarding World of Harry Potter.

Dragon Challenge is actually two slightly different rides.

Together, however, they represent the tallest roller coaster in the park.

And what a roller coaster it is!

Dragon Challenge Hogsmeade Wizarding World of Harry Potter from yourfirstvisit.net

Even more than most coasters, you really really need to sit in the front.

This is because the riders are suspended below the track, with their feet dangling.

As a result, riders other than those at the front can’t really see what’s happening around them–and seeing what’s happening is the best part of this great coaster.

According to Universal, “you’ll feel like a Triwizard Tournament competitor as you climb aboard one of two ferocious dragons that twist, loop, and nearly collide in an intertwining roller coaster chase across the sky.”

Dragon Challenge Hogsmeade Wizarding World of Harry Potter from yourfirstvisit.net (2)

In fact, the ride has very little to do with Harry Potter.

Consequently, lines for it tend to be very short early in the morning, when guests are more focused on the more Pottery elements of the Wizarding World.

However, later in the morning the coaster fans will be taking over, and lines will grow much longer.

June 28, 2010   No Comments

May 28 Soft Opening for Harry Potter?

HOW SOFT A SOFT OPENING FOR HARRY POTTER?

Universal recently announced a June 18 grand opening for the Wizarding World of Harry Potter, but did not confirm a “soft opening”* date.

This has caused some consternation, as Universal has sold packages including access to Harry Potter for dates as early as May 28.

It now looks as though, as predicted,  May 28—or earlier—will in fact be the soft openingof the Wizarding World of Harry Potter.

Travel Weekly quotes Universal publicity manager Carly Reed herethat, regarding certain packages for May 28 and later, that “We are confident in our ability to provide those who have already purchased travel packages [to] … the Wizarding World of Harry Potter the great benefits they expect and we will make special arrangements to accommodate them.”

Note that it may be that only those who purchase these packages (which are reported to be sold out for dates between May 28 and June 18) will be allowed into the soft opening.

Personally, I doubt this…as it would create a real PR problem for Universal…but all remains to be seen!

Soft opening does not mean that everything promoted as being part of the Wizarding World of Harry Potter—or even anything—will be available at any given moment…just that something may be!

 

*“Soft Opening” means some or all of the rides would be open as possible to guests. It is a way of working out kinks in the rides.  These kinks range from technical problems with the rides themselves (which often open and close without notice over the course of the day) to unanticipated issues with lines. etc.
 

LINKS FOR THE WIZARDING WORLD OF HARRY POTTER

Home Donate Sitemap

April 1, 2010   No Comments

The Grand Opening of the Wizarding World of Harry Potter will be June 18

HARRY POTTER OPENING DATE SET

The-Wizarding-World-of-Harry-PotterThe Orlando Sentinel is reporting here that the opening date of Universal Orlando’s The Wizarding World of Harry Potter will be June 18.

This is a tad sooner than this site’s prediction of June 20.

This grand opening of the new section of Universal Orlando’s Islands of Adventure will be later than implied by some package deals.

Universal has been selling Harry Potter packages with dates beginning May 28.

What this almost certainly means is that certain elements of the Wizarding World will be accessible by May 28–or even earlier–but that some of the rides will be in “soft opening.” Soft opening means that they may unpredictably open and close over the course of the day.

[Read more →]

March 25, 2010   No Comments

The Opening Date for the Wizarding World of Harry Potter will be Announced March 25

 Home      Donate      How to Use this Site      Sitemap

Reporting by the Orlando Sentinel (find it here) indicates that Universal Orlando will announce the opening date for The Wizarding World of Harry Potter on March 25th.

At the same time, Universal will announce more details about the new ride, Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey.

March 19, 2010   No Comments

Update on The Wizarding World of Harry Potter

THE WIZARDING WORLD OF HARRY POTTER: MARCH UPDATE

The Wizarding World of Harry PotterA new Universal Orlando brochure for travel agents includes some key new details on height requirements for the rides at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter, and some new language describing the rides. 

As a result, I have updated all the materials in this site’s instructions for visiting the Wizarding World of Harry Potter, and also put the key material below.

[Read more →]

March 10, 2010   No Comments