To be fair, it has definitely been a complete pendulum over the past half-decade on who's present and future lineups I've been most interested in. Despite some padded out timelines, Disney had a terrific lineup of attractions across the late '10s and into the early 2020s, but after Tron the slate dried up and things looked a lil bleak short-term, especially when compared to the idea of Epic on the horizon, which to me signaled a really bold push from Universal and almost a dozen new attractions at once.
Now with Epic in the rearview, and a fresh slate of tasty and purposefully fan-pleasing Disney World expansion announcements lined up for the near future, the turns have thoroughly tabled. We're in essentially the exact opposite scenario, and I'm feeling basically the exact opposite.
... Only this time, now I have a decent picture of both companies' complete ability and offerings; and I'll be honest, it's been a little hard to justify getting terribly excited for the company more consistently giving us attractions like Mario Kart, Ministry, Villain-Con, Yoshi, Skull Island, which have all thoroughly whelmed me at best. And especially when the competition is nearly constantly dishing out stellar work like Rise of the Resistance, Cosmic Rewind, Flight of Passage, on top of their incredible legacy lineup of Tower, Everest, Philharmagic, Fantasmic.
Brand new Disney rides have really felt to me like they've been changing the game in a number of ways, and Universal rides just seem to keep hitting the same familiar beats. Between that and their nearly unbroken streak of Hogsmeade-clone lands (Berk and Celestial are the only real exceptions), I've been slightly worried about UDX's range, or potential lack-thereof.
This is all just me and my own ramblings though. It's all obviously complicated and based on my own everchanging biases. I just like talking about this stuff.