To be honest, I’m not sure I see GCI doing anything too wild here… but that’s not a bad thing, in my view. Their whole ethos since 1996 has been about sticking to a traditional product and perfecting it rather than just doing wild stuff for the sake of it, and I think something that just… works well would be a rather valuable investment in itself.
I’d argue that GCI are almost like the B&M of wooden coaster design; while no GCI coaster is overly innovative, their rides have a tried and tested quality to them, are generally pretty reliable, are generally comfortable and are generally quite well received for their respective target markets. I’m not sure they’d want to do anything to sacrifice that track record. While Gravity Group are arguably the Intamin of wooden coaster design, chucking everything and the kitchen sink into designing wild and innovative layouts with somewhat mixed results, GCI have been more like B&M in sticking with a tried and true product that while not the most innovative or boundary pushing out there, is consistently reliable and a consistent crowd pleaser. I think if GCI attempted too much or went too wild with the Titan Track, it could risk jeopardising their track record.
If anything, I could see GCI’s Titan Track being a perfected RMC IBox Track, which solves some inherent flaw(s) of RMC’s product (even if flaws of RMC’s IBox coasters may admittedly be hard to find…). RMC’s trains often come into the firing line in reviews; could GCI’s Infinity Flyers be a more comfortable and accommodating alternative? RMC’s reliability record is not the greatest (e.g. Steel Vengeance’s bumping issues, Steel Vengeance’s wheel flying off, the entire saga of Lightning Rod, various RMC IBox coasters having structural issues); could GCI present the Titan Track as a more reliable alternative?