Talk:Dragon Challenge

No more dueling?
As was added recently, Dragon Challenge is currently running the two rides separately, without the dueling action, in light of a pair of incidents in which riders were injured by flying objects during the run. However, the addition was made in such a way that it (1) gave too much weight to the change and (2) suggested the change was permanent. I have revised the listing of this to indicate that yes, it's not dueling right now, but that it's pending an investigation, which is basically what the Universal spokesperson said in the cited interview. There should be no speculation as to when/if dueling returns until Universal says something definitive, either that the rides will never duel again or that there will be changes made that will allow the dueling to resume when completed. -- McDoob AU  93  23:52, 17 August 2011 (UTC)


 * Update: The dueling is gone, per the source from the Orlando Sentinel which has been added to the article in the appropriate places. Normally I would move the incident to the Incidents at Universal parks article, but as these have produced such a significant change in the attraction, it seems best to leave it here. I'm certainly open to changing exactly how this is listed, so feel free to make adjustments. As Screamscape put it when publishing this story (complete with the source used here), "R.I.P. Dueling Dragons - Thy Fate Was Chosen." -- McDoob  AU  93  14:36, 21 October 2011 (UTC)

sources, prose, 'soft opening'
reverted my September 14 edits claiming "These refs aren't reliable." The reverted included: Comments/opinions? Thanks, Kirin13 (talk) 01:05, 15 September 2014 (UTC)
 * Editing prose which had nothing to do with ref's.
 * Removing 'soft opening' since ride was open to entire public – so not a soft opening.
 * Adding ref's from themeparkinsider.com, orlandoparksnews.com, and attractionsmagazine.com - which Dom497 had a problem with - even though I added them to counter the themeparktourist.com which is no more reliable then sites I provided – if none of these sites are reliable, then all the info should be removed as not sourced by a reliable source. (btw themeparkinsider.com is currently used on twice as many Wikipedia pages than themeparktourist.com)
 * I guess I'll be the first to say that you probably think getting public attention is the way for you "win"....I offered to solve this issue between us two and clearly you don't want to go down that path. Oh well. Also, a soft opening only means that the ride was open for limited periods of time, NOT limited audience. Also, Themeparktourist has a better reputation that themeparkinsider. Regarding the prose I "edited", I told you the grammar wasn't the best and I've asked you to re-word.


 * Now here is my biggest concern, you added more unreliable refs just because there are already unreliable refs (in your opinion) in the article. That is HORRIBLE wikipedia editing. When you think it is ok to make a article worse, that gets on my nerves.-- Dom497 ( talk ) 01:11, 15 September 2014 (UTC)


 * How is using the talk page a bad thing? When I started writing, there was no message on my talk page. I only saw your message after I posted. But apparently, now I'm the bad guy because I use the talk page.
 * Where did you see "limited periods of time" – I didn't see that in any news articles to indicate ride had limited availability. Also, looking at the linked soft opening, it says "limited audience". Not sure how you're defining things.
 * Once again, I don't see your grammar issues since I barely added/edited any words. If you see issues, feel free to correct. Most the issues I see, are things in the article that were there a long time before my edits.
 * Where is the info that one site is more reliable than the other? Using Wikipedia's search themeparkinsider.com is more frequently used than themeparktourist.com. At the moment, I don't see any reason that info from themeparktourist.com should be treated as fact while info from any other site should be removed at sight, like you're arguing. If all this info is unreliable, then remove. Generally, I prefer, for topics not covered by mass-media, to use lesser-known (and most likely less-reliable sources) than removing the info all together. But, I guess, to you, that's "is HORRIBLE wikipedia editing." Kirin13 (talk) 01:31, 15 September 2014 (UTC)
 * In the amusement park industry, soft-openings mean limited periods of time. When you hear that only media outlets or other select people are allowed (enthusiasts or not), that is called a "media day/event". Regarding my "horrible" editing comment, this article is a GA (if you don't know what that is, let me know and I'll explain). It was reviewed by a user who has years and years of experience here and Theme Park Tourist is fine. When you start adding unreliable sources because you think there are already unreliable sources in the article, that's my problem. (In other words, you added the refs because there were believed there were already "similar" refs....round circle, making the article go below the GA standard.)-- Dom497 ( talk ) 01:47, 15 September 2014 (UTC)
 * The "soft-opening" in other Harry Potter attractions refers to what you call "media day/event". Soft opening as it was wikilinked refers to "limited audience". Even accepting your definition, what was for a "limited periods of time"? (Was it open for limited hours each day? limited time frame? if so, what was the hours/time frame?) Where is the source saying this ride was open for a "limited periods"? None of the links I've seen, say that.
 * If "a user who has years and years of experience here" said "Theme Park Tourist is fine", then I believe similar sites are fine and reliable as well – unless you have evidence/info to show that these other sites are less reliable. Multiple lesser known sources are better than one lesser known source. So when no major sources are available, I prefer to gather multiple lesser sources - unless I know these lesser sources are unreliable.
 * In, you changed the lead to say "coasters no longer duel." Yet it's never explained what it means for coasters to "duel". Either the earlier text needs to be edited to explain that being "dispatched simultaneously, providing three near-miss encounters" gave the coaster its dueling name, or more generic text (like "no longer launch simultaneously" which is understood by a ordinary reader) should be used.
 * Also, in the same revision you said ride opened on March 18, but this date is different in every article I've seen. Also, all these articles are WP:CBALL since all came before the coasters were reopened. I still don't understand what you mean by "soft-opened" since from what I've read, ride was fully opened. Also, some of the articles state the ride remained as "Dueling Dragons" when it reopened (until the main Harry Potter opening). (Btw: the source you're arguing for, themeparktourist.com, says ride won't be renamed until Harry Potter opening. Another source, attractionsmagazine.com, clearly says ride is "still be called Dueling Dragons".) Wayback Machine shows the Universal's website calling the ride "Dueling Dragons" in April. Kirin13 (talk) 02:20, 15 September 2014 (UTC)
 * If there is one thing to keep in mind, its that the "Soft launch" article is cited by completely unreliable sources (I hope we can both agree that the two sources there are the equivalent of Yahoo Answers).-- Dom497 ( talk ) 18:54, 15 September 2014 (UTC)
 * That article shouldn't exist given its sources or lack thereof. Considering the wikilink was added to this article to get it past GA review, tells this term isn't well defined for an average reader (or an average GA reviewer). Let's take wiktionary definition instead. I can see how it would apply if this was a new ride. However, this ride wasn't new, it didn't change, nor was it renamed (at that time). It reopened after a three-week maintenance, more or less the same. Kirin13 (talk) 00:42, 16 September 2014 (UTC)
 * Hmmm...a soft-opening doesn't necessarily mean a ride has to be new. I know it was closed for only 3 weeks, but TECHNICALLY, the ride was re-themed, providing a slightly different guest experience (the queue are) which does make the experience new. I know, I'm stretching the definition....but IMO, I would say leave it.-- Dom497 ( talk ) 01:23, 16 September 2014 (UTC)

Name
Now that the ride is defunct, should we revert the title of the article to its original name? Malcolmmwa (talk) 21:09, 2 August 2022 (UTC)