BREAKING: Disneyland Introducing a Paid Digital FastPass Service Called Disney MaxPass

Disney today finally announced the further expansion of FASTPASS to two of their most popular attractions — Toy Story Mania in Disney California Adventure park and Matterhorn Bobsleds in Disneyland park. However, the bigger news is that the eventual introduction of digital FASTPASS at the resort will be part of a paid service.

Later this year, Disney will launch Disney MaxPass, which will allow guests unlimited downloads of their high-resolution PhotoPass images, but also enable the convenience of mobile booking and redemption of Disney FASTPASS return times – all by using the Disneyland App. Disney MaxPass will be available for an introductory price of $10 a day. Disneyland Resort Annual Passholders also will have the opportunity to purchase Disney MaxPass on a daily or yearly basis.

Guests will continue to have the option of Disney FASTPASS service at no cost by obtaining FASTPASSES at attraction FASTPASS kiosks, just as they do today.

This contradicts rumors of the last year or so about the installation of the system and ensures that paper FASTPASS service will remain at the Disneyland Resort for the time being.

Disneyland Retooling Eastern Gateway Project Amid Good Neighbor Hotel and Business Concerns

In response to the Eastern Gateway plans for the Disneyland Resort and concerns that good neighbor hotels and nearby businesses, Disneyland may now be re-examining some aspects of this plan according to the OC Register:

Local entrepreneurs again voiced concerns over the effect a proposed parking garage and bridge to the Disneyland Resort would have on their businesses, this time in front of the Planning Commission on Monday evening, while Disney officials struck a collaborative tone – stressing their willingness to find solutions to their counterparts’ worries.

Disney intends to create a new transportation hub, parking structure and a pedestrian bridge over Harbor Boulevard connecting them with Disneyland and Disney California Adventure ahead of the opening of ÒStar WarsÓ land in its signature theme park. Above, a view from the south end of the parking structure off of Disney Way. (Rendering courtesy of the Disneyland Resort)

Disney intends to create a new transportation hub, parking structure and a pedestrian bridge over Harbor Boulevard connecting them with Disneyland and Disney California Adventure ahead of the opening of ‘Star Wars’ land in its signature theme park. Above, a view from the south end of the parking structure off of Disney Way.

Further underscoring the work still to be done to appease hotel and restaurant owners over access to Disneyland and Disney California Adventure is that the city announced it is pushing back a scheduled Jan. 23 meeting to approve a permit for the bridge. A new date has not been set.

“We’re going to keep collaborating, keep working hard in the coming weeks and months,” said Joe Haupt, the president of Spectrum Development Group, a consultant for Disney.

Business owners, though, tried to pressure Disney to follow up on promises of collaboration by stating their case to the commission, the first time they have addressed a formal body of public officials. Council chambers were filled and about a dozen people spoke.

“Our problem is that it literally routes pedestrians away from our businesses,” said Mariam El Haj, who is part of a family ownership group that operates the IHOP on Harbor Boulevard. “We ask that the greatest creative minds come up with a more creative solution.”

Disney’s Eastern Gateway Project is part of a $1 billion investment deal the entertainment company made with Anaheim last year, partially to avoid a gate tax, that would see a 6,901-spot parking garage and new security area go up behind independently owned hotels and restaurants on Harbor Boulevard. A 15-foot high, 65-foot wide bridge would span Harbor Boulevard to take Disney guests into the esplanade to buy tickets and enter the park.

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The original plan would require hotel and restaurant patrons to walk one block southward and cut through a walkway to get to the security area. From there, they could enter the park.

Disney officials have since suggested allowing access to the security area from the backs of hotels and improving signs directing people to restaurants and shops.

Several pointed questions – such as about the practicability of building a bridge versus a tunnel or about the width of the bridge – suggested skepticism of the plan by some on the commission.

The proposal irked some of the more than 25 business owners along Harbor Boulevard. They argued at a community workshop last week and again Monday that the bridge is an inconvenience to their guests – who can now cross Harbor to the esplanade – and will decrease foot traffic along Harbor, the majority source of their patrons.

Placing the security behind their businesses also struck a nerve with some owners, who said Disney is bolstering the safety of their main entrance while making increasing the vulnerability of customers and employees of the local businesses.

“Our family is also interested in safety and security for our guests and employees,” said Greg Eisenman, general manager of Tropicana and Camelot Inn hotels. He added that putting a security screening area behind the local businesses put the puts the risk “in our backyards.”

Dan Hughes, the former Fullerton police chief and Disney‘s vice president of security and emergency services, said that moving the security area back and creating a buffer between screening and the park allows officials to better “observe behaviors” and identify those who may pose a threat to the resort.

CONFIRMED: Remember… Dreams Come True Fireworks Will Return to Disneyland

As we told you last week, the beloved fireworks spectacular “Remember… Dreams Come True” will be returning to Disneyland Park.

Initially presented as the evening highlight of the 50th anniversary of Disneyland Resort in 2005, “Remember… Dreams Come True” features Tinker Bell’s flight, brilliant fireworks, soaring music, dazzling special effects and an amazing journey through the various lands of Disneyland with archival audio tracks, favorite songs and familiar phrases from some of the park’s most popular attractions, past and present. From the flame effects erupting from Sleeping Beauty Castle during the Indiana Jones Adventure sequence, to the feeling of being in a virtual stretching room as fireworks launch straight into the sky to welcome the Haunted Mansion’s “Grim, Grinning Ghosts,” Remember is sure to please any fan of the park.

You’ll have a chance to relive all those moments and more, when “Remember… Dreams Come True” once again begins regular weekend performances on Feb. 3.

PHOTO REPORT: Disneyland Resort 12/2/16 (Railroad Bridges Installed, Star Wars Land, New Security Checkpoints, Paper Bag: The Ride, ETC.)

Disneyland Reporter Conner Purzycki brings us back to the Disneyland Resort to see all that is new and exciting in his latest photo report. The Rivers of America are taking shape quickly, the tarps are growing on Tower of Terror, and a security shake-up of massive proportions is underway at the Resort, so let’s check it all out!

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The Disneyland Resort  has also introduced a preferred parking program. That being said, parking this far away from the parks does seem a bit insane for the price being charged.

Star Wars Land

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Construction continues on the Star Wars themed land for Disneyland Park, visible from the Mickey and Friends Parking Structure.

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Just below Big Thunder Mountain, you can get your first glimpse at the new train bridge (in white) for the Disneyland Railroad, which will take it past some waterfalls on the mountainside hiding the Star Wars Land from view.

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A closeup also reveals some of the man-made rockwork around the bridge.

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We can see more rock-work taking shape just on the other side of the ridge.

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While the new Rivers of America area is speeding along, work has pretty much stalled on the rest of the site.

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Security Changes and Area Enhancements 

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The terrible colored tile in the Mickey and Friends parking structure is finally being replaced with some more pleasant brick flooring.

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New security checkpoints beyond Downtown Disney are being constructed, but still no word on when they will be completed. There is also a new tram stop being built.

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It seems the new security checkpoint will be temporarily set up here until a more permanent solution is built.

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To the fencing class teacher who has a free ad in the background, you can send that payment via check or PayPal.

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Hopefully the finished product will look better than this…

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Fences will ensure that guests who have not been screened can not enter.

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Downtown Disney

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This thing sis a Christmas decoration in Downtown Disney… we think…

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More fencing up for another checkpoint near the Disneyland Hotel.

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More Christmas obelisks… Please don’t send hate-mail.

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The outdoor seating area at Tortilla Joe’s is finished.

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Walls are up around the former House of Blues, which picked up and moved to the nearby Garden Walk mall. Last we had heard, a version of The Edison might find its way here.

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Sprinkles opened recently with an awesome Tower of Terror costume on the front if it…

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Work continues to add Curl Surf and Pandora shops nearby.

Disneyland Park

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Mickey Mouse was out and about, meeting guests in Town Square.

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Set-up for the Candlelight Processional is nearing completion behind the train station.

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A Moana meet and greet has opened at the Aladdin’s Oasis area.

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The Jingle Cruise has returned for 2016.

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Work continues to get the Rivers of America ready for its Summer 2017 return, including the rumored enhancements to Fantasmic.

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Disney California Adventure

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It’s Christmas on Buena Vista Street.

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All of the staging for the various nighttime parties that were held in the park over the last 6 years is now gone from Hollywood Land.

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Sadly, the Sorcerer Mickey Mouse fountain was paved over at some point.

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More scaffolding is going up on Paper Bag: The Ride… I mean the Twilight Zone Tarp of Terror. 

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The attraction will close formally after the new year, but work has already begun for the conversion into Guardians of the Galaxy: Mission Breakout.

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The Festival of Holidays booths may be a bit expensive, but they are popular with guests.

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Conner does us proud with the customary garbage can picture of the food he ordered.

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If you thought Epcot price was bad, take a look at the slider price in California…

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2017 merchandise has started to arrive at stores around the resort.

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A selection of California Adventure merchandise was recently released as well.

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And it features the Hollywood Tower Hotel…

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The grizzly bear outside of Grizzly River Run has a giant holiday sweater and it lights up at night. This is the #1 reason I am visiting DCA next week.

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We conclude our report with a look at the holiday decor inside Disney’s Grand Californian Hotel & Spa.

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The annual gingerbread display is amazing, as always.

Splitsville Bowling and Dining Coming to the Disneyland Resort

Splitsville Luxury Lanes, which has pioneered a fun and inventive new approach to bowling as a social experience for all ages, will roll into the Downtown Disney District at the Disneyland Resort in late 2017.

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The first Splitsville in California will offer a unique combination of dining, bowling and live entertainment with 600 restaurant seats, a large outdoor patio overlooking the Downtown Disney District, two full-service bars and 20 luxury bowling lanes.

Located adjacent to Tortilla Jo’s in the former home of the House of Blues, Splitsville will have a dramatic, mid-century-inspired design. The menu by James Beard Award-winning chef Tim Cushman will include fresh-rolled sushi, gourmet appetizers, hand-cut steaks, and if you can spare it, alley classics like burgers, crinkle-cut fries and hand-tossed pizzas.

Splitsville opened a location at Walt Disney World’s Disney Springs in 2012.

PHOTO REPORT: Disneyland Resort 11/11/16 (Festival of the Holidays Menus, Christmas Decorations, Giant Crane, ETC.)

Reporter Tim Alcoser returns with another fantastic photo report from the Disneyland Resort as the holiday season descends on Anaheim. Who’s ready for food, decorations, and an inexplicable giant crane? WELL THEN, LET’S GO!!!

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The Festival of the Holidays Begins

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The Festival of the Holidays has kicked off at Disney California Adventure.

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The entire park is already in its holiday finest as well.

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An archway near the Carthay Circle Theater welcomes guests to the Festival of Holidays.

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Banner sup around the main thoroughfare.

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Booths had lines before they even opened for the day.

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The drummer group is particularly enjoyable, catch them if you can!

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Some extra carts tacked with holiday merchandise have been rolled out for the season.

It’s beginning to look a lot like Cars Land

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The ever-popular Cars Land goes overboard with decorations celebrating the California car culture.

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Even Stanley gets a Santa cap!

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This and That

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Work continues on the conversion of Tower of Terror into Guardians of the Galaxy – Mission Breakout.

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While MagicBands are never coming, so many of these touch point readers have been installed around the resort. One has to be curious if they will find some way to utilize them in a new system.

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While the show is being retooled, FROZEN: Live at the Hyperion is down to just two shows a day.

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The Doctor Strange preview is currently running at the Sunset Showcase Theater, former home to MuppetVision 3-D.

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An actual costume from the film is on display inside.

“Come with Me to Disneyland”

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The holiday season is in full swing at Disneyland Park as well.20161109_120144

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The Jingle Cruise has returned to Adventureland.

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There is a massive crane parked outside of Pirates of the Caribbean…

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It is boxed in a small fenced area, but it is really, really, really hard to miss.

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Work continues on the Rivers of America and a whole new Fantasmic show.

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The Columbia is getting ready for the Pirates of the Caribbean sequence.

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Star Wars land off in the distance.

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The borders off the land that will separate it from the rest of the park are already taking shape, but the same can not be said for anything else in the project.

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“Story”.

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We’re waiting too. This remote outpost planet is taking too long!

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The Main Street Vehicles are decorated for the season.

Trams, Cars, and Security Checkpoints

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 Work continues on the new tram lanes.

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Not only will the tram lanes be changing, but guests will also need to go through security before they enter the Downtown Disney area.

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Star Wars land construction, as seen from the Mickey and Friends Parking Structure.

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See ya; real soon from the Happiest Place on Earth.

Disneyland Resort To Move Security Screenings to Include Downtown Disney

Security checkpoints at the Disneyland Resort are moving to include Downtown Disney

Security checkpoints at the Disneyland Resort are moving to include Downtown Disney

From the OC Register:

ANAHEIM – Disney is moving one of its security checkpoints so that Downtown Disney is pulled inside its secured area.

The move was expected to be completed by year’s end.

“We are moving the location of our bag-check and metal detectors to the point where guests enter our property through Downtown Disney and the Mickey & Friends parking structure,” a Disneyland Resort spokeswoman said.

Guests would be checked as soon as they left the Mickey & Friends parking structure before boarding the tram toward Downtown Disney.

Two other checkpoints are set to be added: one of them will be between ESPN Zone and Rainforest Cafe and the other between ESPN Zone and Earl of Sandwich restaurant. Officials said these would likely service guests coming from the hotels.

Officials hope the change will make it easier for guests: They could leave Disneyland or Disney California Adventure for Downtown Disney, a shopping and restaurant district, and return to one of the parks without going through a checkpoint for a second time.

Guests can already pass from one park to the other without going through a checkpoint.

The checkpoint on the east side of the parks, near the Harbor Boulevard entrance, is not moving for now.

Paint the Night Parade Returns November 18th on Select Evenings Through Holiday Season

Disney’s Paint the Night Electrical Parade will return to Disneyland Park for the busy holiday season starting November 18th, 2016 on select evenings.

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As of now the parade will be performing during the busiest holiday weeks and on weekends through the season. The new parade times appear to be 6:30PM and 10:30PM, a pretty big departure from the original Summer schedule for the parade (despite Disneyland Park still being open until midnight on those evenings).

The Main Street Electrical Parade will return to replace Pain the Night in January for what is being promoted as a limited time run.

REVIEW: Disneyland Park Introduces Insane Cereal & Candy-Topped Doughnuts

Disneyland Park is home to some of the most epic theme park snacks of all time: the Dole Whip, the churro, and the Mickey Pretzel, just to name a few. Now, as of this past weekend, it is home to specialty doughnuts. BUT DO THEY LIVE UP TO THE RICH LEGACY OF JUNK FOOD AT DISNEYLAND? You are about to find out…

Disneyland doughnuts can be found here, at the hub coffee cart

Disneyland’s doughnuts can be found here, at the hub coffee cart

The hub coffee cart is home to the crazy creations, an interesting spot to say the least. This location already can boast some pretty hefty lines (even without selling Starbucks Coffee), never mind with these colorful treats glistening in the visible display case.

Each doughnut is $5.75 each

Each doughnut is $5.75 each

All 3 doughnuts we found upon visiting are $5.75 each. Enough yapping, let’s eat some “family-based treats” at the Happiest Place on Earth.

The doughnuts of Disneyland

The doughnuts of Disneyland

Chocolate Doughnut with Peanut Butter Cups & Crispy Orange Sprinkles ($5.75)

Chocolate Doughnut with Peanut Butter Cups & Crispy Orange Sprinkles ($5.75)

Chocolate Doughnut with Peanut Butter Cups & Crispy Orange Sprinkles ($5.75)

The peanut butter cup doughnut was OK. It tasted like a donut with a peanut butter cup on top… which I suppose is what it is. The chocolate icing was nice in flavor, but the actual donut was meh. In fairness, it was 10pm in the evening when these were obtained, so they just might have been sitting there for too long to be perfect.

Lemon Doughnut with Fruity Pebbles ($5.75)

Lemon Doughnut with Fruity Pebbles ($5.75)

Lemon Doughnut with Fruity Pebbles ($5.75)

Now the lemon doughnut covered in Fruity Pebbles… this one is amazing. The lemon icing mixed with the fruity pebbles is simply magically. Even though the doughnut underneath wasn’t very fresh, the tartness of the lemon mixing with the sweet Fruity Pebbles makes for one of the absolute best snacks in all of Disneyland.

Lemon Doughnut with Fruity Pebbles ($5.75)

Lemon Doughnut with Fruity Pebbles ($5.75)

Vanilla Doughnut with M&M’s Minis, Rainbow Sprinkles, & Waffle Cone Bits ($5.75)

Vanilla Doughnut with M&M's Minis, Rainbow Sprinkles, & Waffle Cone Bits ($5.75)

Vanilla Doughnut with M&M’s Minis, Rainbow Sprinkles, & Waffle Cone Bits ($5.75)

This vanilla donut was just alright. It is really, really sweet, In fact…

In-joke for my fellow wrestling fans...

In-joke for my fellow wrestling fans…

The waffle cone bits were soft and not crunchy which is not what we expected. The M&M’s Minis actually worked very well on the doughnut. This one isn’t a bad choice if you have picky eaters or kids in your party who want to get in on the fun.

Vanilla Doughnut with M&M's Minis, Rainbow Sprinkles, & Waffle Cone Bits ($5.75)

Vanilla Doughnut with M&M’s Minis, Rainbow Sprinkles, & Waffle Cone Bits ($5.75)

OVERALL

We should probably try them again when they are fresh, but regardless, the Fruity Pebbles doughnut is the real winner. This thing can go toe-to-toe with the best of them as far as Disneyland snacks are concerned. Be sure to give that one (and maybe one of the other two) a shot on your next trip to Disneyland Park.

BREAKING: Disneyland Resort Will Launch Digital FastPass Service in November

Disneyland Resort has been testing a new FastPass system for their theme parks in a very limited capacity over the last year or so. While the tests were never very widespread and it seems that the actual rollout of the new system has been continually delayed, it appears that Disney is finally ready to unleash a digital version of FastPass on the West Coast.

Barcodes in the Disneyland app and on tickets will be the key to a new Disneyland Resort FastPass service

Barcodes in the Disneyland app and on tickets will be the key to a new Disneyland Resort FastPass service

While it may not be a full rollout, we can confirm that Disneyland Resort is looking to launch their new digital FastPass service at Toy Story Midway Mania at Disney California Adventure park starting on November 20th, 2016. Some recent queue modifications were made at the attraction in preparation for this. New FastPass signage and such will be installed by Walt Disney Imagineering at the attraction in Mid-November. Toy Story Midway Mania did not open with or add any FastPass service despite being quite popular at California Adventure, but there is a queue that was constructed that can be used for it.

Toy Story Midway Mania will be the first attraction in California to test a digital FastPass service

Toy Story Midway Mania will be the first attraction in California to test a digital FastPass service

It is unknown how exactly the FastPass bookings will work through the app, but it is assumed that this is a permanent installation of the system in the park. There are reports that other attractions around the park are already installing the infrastructure to join the digital FastPass system in the following weeks and months.

As previously reported, the new system will use the official Disneyland app to allow guests to book FastPass reservations digitally. The new system will utilize a barcode within the app or on a guest’s Disneyland Resort park ticket to redeem the FastPass. The app will be the only way to book the FastPass reservations during the early stages. In-park kiosks for booking may eventually be introduced.

The Disneyland Resort has continued to use the old paper FastPass system, even though Walt Disney World’s FastPass+ system using digital FastPass booking and RFID ticket media has been in place for almost 4 years now.