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Friday 17 January 2020

Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance Ride Review

The latest game news from IGN - one of my fave channels ever - check it out Editor's note: This is a spoiler-free review of Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance, which opened at Disney World on December 5 and Disneyland on January 17. This review was originally published on December 4 after the ride's Orlando opening, and we've since experienced the ride again at Disneyland for its Anaheim opening. Despite IGN being in the business of reviews for more than a decade, theme park ride reviews are still new for us - but we know that they're of interest to a portion of our audience, especially when they're based on franchises we care about. We want to offer an honest assessment of whether we believe a theme park attraction is worth your time, just as we do with games, movies, and TV shows, with the caveat that your own experience will undoubtedly be colored by what you enjoy most about theme park rides, so we encourage you to visit the park and experience it for yourself if you can, and share your thoughts on how we can make these reviews more useful to you in the comments! For more, be sure to read our review of the Galaxy's Edge Disney ride Millennium Falcon: Smuggler's Run, and watch our full ridethrough video for the Rise of the Resistance and the Rise of the Resistance queue. The Star Wars hotel, Galactic Starcruiser, opens at Disney World in 2021. [poilib element="accentDivider"] When Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge opened at Anaheim’s Disneyland and Orlando’s Disney World in 2019, the main selling point of the new land was the opportunity to “live your own Star Wars story” - offering guests a chance to fly the Millennium Falcon, build a lightsaber, or get rowdy in a cantina (at least for a not-very-villainous window of 45 minutes). But with only one ride fully operational at launch (the underwhelming Smugglers Run), Galaxy’s Edge felt a little like a starship with the hyperdrive disabled - a feat of engineering that was as frustrating as it was transporting, full of untapped potential. Thankfully, the land's new ride, Rise of the Resistance, helps Galaxy’s Edge make the jump to lightspeed. What sets Rise of the Resistance apart from pretty much any other theme park ride is the way it completely immerses you in a galaxy far, far away - but without the pressure of having to pilot the Falcon or carry out other tasks that might affect the outcome of the ride. That might seem like a small thing, since the majority of theme park rides are fairly passive experiences, but the most compelling aspect of Rise is that you truly feel like you’re an integral part of the Star Wars movies (rather than just a visitor to Hogwarts or Pandora), while still having the opportunity to just observe the action. [ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2019/12/05/star-wars-rise-of-the-resistance-disney-world-ride-queue-walkthrough"] One of our biggest criticisms of Smugglers Run stems from the fact that it’s such a sensory overload that it’s tough to absorb everything that’s going on, since it relies on riders taking their attention off the action unfolding in front of them to press buttons or steer the ship. Rise of the Resistance is even more ambitious in terms of scale and execution, but it never lets its spectacle overwhelm its storytelling. There are plenty of interactive elements - some that even inspire feelings of believable peril - but being able to just go along for the ride as the Resistance tries to help you escape the First Order is a very pure experience, one that will make you feel like true “Rebel scum.” On the surface, Rise of the Resistance probably shares the most creative DNA with Universal’s Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey, since both are scenic dark rides that utilize the queue to establish their world and narrative, but Rise takes things a step further by basically integrating the queue into the action of the ride. While reporters had the benefit of experiencing Rise of the Resistance with no one else on it (which obviously cut down on the wait times), it has several sections that would probably be considered holding rooms in any other attraction. Thankfully, unlike the interminable “genetic matching room” in Avatar: Flight of Passage, these areas each advance the story and offer their own excitement long before guests finally get to the seated portion of the adventure. While Rise of the Resistance is undoubtedly a thrill ride, with “rapid motion, sudden stops, and sharp turns,” it’s not going to give you the same adrenaline high as a roller coaster or even Forbidden Journey, which is a much more turbulent trip. (Motion-wise, different parts of the ride recall the simulator aspects of Star Tours or Smugglers Run and the roving movements of Disneyland Paris’ Ratatouille ride or Universal’s Amazing Adventures of Spider-Man, although thankfully without any headache-inducing 3D.) That may be a pro or a con, depending on what your favorite type of theme park ride is, but it also makes the attraction more suitable for a wider audience. And with two levels of tiered seating in the ride cars, plus some clever design choices that ensure that most of the action takes place above you in the holding rooms - meaning taller people won’t block shorter riders’ view (another issue with Smugglers Run) - Rise of the Resistance feels like an attraction that guests of all ages can enjoy, even if younger kids might get spooked by having Kylo Ren stalking you through the corridors with his lightsaber drawn. [widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=star-wars-rise-of-the-resistance-full-disney-world-queue-photo-tour&captions=true"] But Rise's real strength is in its ability to tell a compelling, cohesive story that ratchets up the tension and keeps you guessing as it unfolds, recreating a desperate chase through a First Order Star Destroyer in a way that evokes Luke, Han, and Leia’s attempt to escape the Death Star in A New Hope, complete with copious blaster fire and encounters with multiple Stormtroopers. Along the way, you’re assisted by Rey, Finn, and Poe, as well as other members of the Resistance, and you’ll come face to face with both Kylo Ren and General Hux, thanks to a combination of precise projections and lifelike animatronics. Like Hondo Ohnaka in Smugglers Run, the animatronics are the standouts here, especially a new Mon Calamari character called Beck who helps guide your breakout. It all plays out like a believable sequence from one of the films, complete with a rousing, goosebump-inducing score and crisp visuals that use CGI backdrops and footage of the actors, in addition to the practical effects and character projections. You’re generally being jostled around too much to admire the gorgeous starfield vistas you can see outside the windows of your various transports, and when you’re caught in the midst of a dogfight between the First Order and the Resistance, it all feels very real, and manages to look a little less artificial than the scenery on Smugglers Run - probably because most of the action takes place in space rather than on a specific planet. [ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2019/05/31/star-wars-galaxys-edge-in-60-seconds"] Visitors who ride at different times of day will also be able to observe the gorgeous variations from day to night on the screens inside the ride depending on when you “take off,” further heightening the realism of the journey, and the ride features slightly different experiences and narrative interactions depending on which car you end up in. If you’re a theme park fan, you’ve probably already read about the life-size replica AT-ATs and a TIE fighter that have pride of place inside the ride, but they’re even more impressive in person. Likewise, the Disney Parks cast members who have been enlisted as First Order officers throughout the ride do an especially convincing job, refusing to break character - especially if you make like Baby Yoda and start touching buttons you shouldn’t be playing with while you’re waiting to be taken for interrogation. [ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2019/12/06/we-rode-star-wars-rise-of-the-resistance-at-galaxys-edge"] All told, the action of the ride takes about 18 minutes, with the portion in the ride car accounting for a solid four and a half minutes, giving you plenty of Star Wars action even if the wait time is long (which it inevitably will be). The only lingering query after the press preview is how efficient the queue system actually is in terms of shuttling guests through each holding area and getting them loaded onto the cars without much of a delay - not to mention whether there will be any technical glitches given the complex nature of the ride’s design. (Editor's note: the Disney World launch was reportedly plagued with breakdowns and issues with the virtual queue system, so it remains to be seen whether Disneyland will encounter similar issues - the media preview was, as far as we could tell, glitch free.) [widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=star-wars-galaxys-edge-unites-franchise-icons&captions=true"]

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