
For me that thing has been theme parks. Standing in line with the grumpy dads, necking teenagers, and the toddler exploring your shin with his plastic sword without anyone whose opinion you care about to prevent you from explaining your personal bubble to those around you in undiplomatic terms? I dunno about that.
So naturally I had to try it. I figured I’d start at Epcot since it has plenty of things to do that don’t require waiting in line. It’s not exactly a thrills-centric park with rides that draw huge crowds or Rise of the Resistance-length lines. I thought I’d wander around the World Showcase, look at stuff, and have a relaxing, Disney magic-filled day.

So naturally I had to try it. At 6:59 am I was refreshing the app, and (without reading) kept hitting continue until I saw a “Congratulations!” screen. I got into group 2 with a 9:20 am boarding time. (The park opens at 9 am.) Nice. (My boarding time actually came up at 8:40 am, when I was still on the freeway, but they give you an hour to use it, so I’d made it by the time it expired at 9:40 am. And there wasn’t any waiting in line, we sort of walked on to the ride.)
The new Guardians of the Galaxy ride is like Space Mountain meets the teacups. It’s a rollercoaster that starts with a launch then runs around a star-filled room like Space Mountain, but each set of two benches spins. So you, the person next to you, and the two people behind you will be spinning together while the other four people on your train will be spinning together. Apparently the spinning wreaks havoc on the stomachs of people with motion sickness. The rumor is that the ride breaks down a lot, and that it’s usually so they can clean up vomit. And yes, while we were waiting to board there was a long delay, then as we were getting off the ride, there were two men standing guard over a collection of rags covering some spill on the exit platform.
I don’t have the most stellar motion sickness reputation (I can’t play first-person video games for very long), but I knew that I’d be fine if I looked at a fixed object (like the track, which I was able to see fortunately). So I didn’t get sick. In fact it was way fun. So smooth! It does feel like you’re twirling through space (or at least something without a floor). Plus, because the benches rotate, they do a BACKWARDS launch at the beginning, which was delightful. (The train is always going the same direction, they just rotate the seats right before.)

Epcot was having its Holiday Kitchen event, where countries have a special small-bites menu, and several items were vegan. (There was peanut stew, tamales, spring rolls, potato latkes, and a black and white cookie.) I opted for L’Chaim between France and Morocco because they were the ones that had two vegan items.





It’s a trackless dark ride, like Rise of the Resistance where you can see the shiny black floor with rubber cart lines criss-crossing it. But, unlike Rise of the Resistance, the action happens on screens. So your rat cart pulls into a dock and you watch a scene, then it moves to another location for another scene. It was a good ride! It’s from the point of view of a rat on the floor, and you’re trying to dodge obstacles in the restaurant.

