I think I'm once again a little confused about what's desired here.
A rebalancing of the park's attractions roster away from being
as heavily-weighted towards screens and simulators as it is today.
Between HRRR and LC, both IOA and USF have construction walls up for active projects right now. Especially if both are replaced, Supercharged is replaced after that, and Simpsons is presumably targeted after that, what about that screams "languishing" or being tossed aside to be carried by events?
Keep in mind two things:
- I was responding to the train of thought that says it would be okay if USF was carried by events.
- My comparison with Epcot was what I don't want to see happen, not necessarily what I think is happening.
But to the larger point, as I've said elsewhere, the HRRR replacement and Supercharged overlay (should it transpire) are lateral moves in terms of substance and the impact on that park's lineup (but hopefully functional and creative improvements). Neither will/would address what I see as the park's core weakness, and neither did VillainCon, DreamWorks Land, or Bourne (as much as I like it).
Meanwhile, in the last six years, IOA has gotten two blockbuster mega-attractions that are widely-acclaimed (I may not have any personal use for VelociCoaster, but it's good to have it in the park), and is now potentially poised to get the sort of new land that could be really beneficial at USF.
As I've always argued, it's not that Universal hasn't given attention to USF; it's that I don't particularly think the attention it has gotten has been up to par, or has kept pace with the stellar work Universal has done next door or at Epic.
I don’t think it’s realistic to expect Universal to suddenly throw things into overdrive because… well, that’s just not how these things typically go.
I don't think it's realistic, either... which I why thought Universal should try to get out in front the current situation* before their attention became more divided than ever before.
* This is why I was particularly disappointed that Universal didn't take the opportunity with the DreamWorks overlay or the Shrek closure.