MestnyiGeroi
Giga Poster
Bit of stereotyping here, but sounds to me like you’re describing what might be more common among young enthusiasts? Not most young enthusiasts, but a certain type that has the zeal of the neophyte.As a ride host, I found enthusiasts to be far, FAR worse than the general public. The general public doesn't need, nor want to know, everything about every ride ever built. They don't care about what each element is called. They don't care about stats. They don't even know that there might be a small amusement park the next town over because they don't care.
Enthusiasts, on the other hand, want people in line to know all the different rides and places they've been to. They wear shirts from a park that's in a different state/country than the one they're currently in. They want to be asked about their knowledge, they want to play the one-up on everyone around them. Oh, I've been on 1,045 different rides! This park is just terrible because they don't invest in a giga dive invert. Who cares that they're a small, family-run amusement park. They have the space to build it! They can just tear out all the family attractions and games and whatnot. I want the old, beloved double out and back coaster turned into an RMC airtime machine! Who really cares if it's beloved by the local population. I certainly don't. They should have taken it out years ago, they'd get over it.
I might have gone overboard at a certain point, but I think my point is clear:
The general public can make all the mistakes and hyperboles they want. They just want to enjoy what they have.
I find most older enthusiasts are more or less in line with the ACE ethos of being the ideal guest: obeying rules, never giving ops or staff a hard time, being positive about the place.
Of the items on your list, two relate in some way to me (certainly not the other items):
1. I will often wear T-shirts relating to rides or parks in different states. I understand you see this in line with everything else: people who can’t wait to brag about their enthusiast knowledge and experience. But I don’t wear these shirts to brag at all; I wear them because they *always* start up conversations with fellow enthusiasts, so I get to meet a lot of people that way and enjoy the conversations in line.
2. I would never complain out loud or give ride ops/staff a hard time (or discuss stats with them, lol) — I think I’m the opposite — BUT if you’ve been to a lot of parks you can’t help at least *noticing* when things are done poorly. Yesterday I was at Mt. Olympus and they had the poorest operations of any park I’d ever been to, and just so many things about the park were poorly done. So that was the worst I’d seen, but no park employee knew I felt that way at any point.
I’m not saying this to defend myself, but to defend enthusiasts in general. Most of the ones I know — and I know a lot — are nothing like the people you describe. They’re respectful and, well, enthusiastic. So you probably wouldn’t notice these types at all — the majority of enthusiasts. You notice the minority that have to advertise their passion, and from my perspective those people are few and far between among enthusiasts.