![]() ![]() There are two major things to do in virtual Disneyland: interact with your favorite characters, and go on rides. You want to ride Splash Mountain? You don't have to queue up behind tourists for over two hours, or get a FastPass to return at 10:30 pm. There are plenty of families walking throughout the park (holding conversations that you can eavesdrop on), but the lines are short. Probably the best part is that Disneyland seems to be permanently in the off-season. While it was sometimes disappointing that I couldn't, say, grab a bite to eat at The Hungry Bear, or watch Captain EO, that really just stems from the fact that Disneyland looks so realistic that it feels like I could do everything. You can walk through Sleeping Beauty's castle to find Snow White waiting for you in front of the carousel. Everything is in place and detailed to perfection, down to the location of the more iconic "Hidden Mickeys." Matterhorn rises up over Fantasyland. The ambient music features the same tunes you hear in the actual park. Even things that didn't need to be rendered, like the FastPass alcove for rides, are in here. Nearly every inch of the park is in here, save for certain shops, restaurants and restrooms. I'm amazed at how well Disneyland is presented. ![]() ![]() You can walk from the main gate of the park all the way back to Mickey's Toontown, and everywhere in between. Frontier, the group behind the almost too cute Kinectimals, has made a nearly perfectly to scale rendition of Disneyland. ![]()
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