But what price do you put on that upgrade, with only two nights a week? Price it too low, both nights will go to capacity by 6:02 p.m., alienating everyone who paid an upcharge and can't get in. Price it too high, you alienate the bulk of your APs even more--"$500 to go a couple nights a week????"--and the only APs who end up taking you up on it are the "whales" who love UOR, have money, and were never going to give up their APs anyway.
A reservation system potentially solves this, but in three decades UOR has never implemented a true reservation system on that level. Not with COVID, not with insane HHN crowds, not with Mardi Gras concerts that go to capacity before the parade starts. It's just not in their corporate DNA.
In the meantime, they have a park that goes close enough to full every day with all full-price tickets. Fans love to hate it, but UOR making money, and if we're being honest, it keeps that special "new park feel" a lot longer. If anything, there's probably a lesson for HHN here.
This. Let's see how Mardi Gras and Spring Break look next year before we start writing the original parks' obituaries. Even without Epic, a UOR pass is still the more affordable mid-tier option between the dumpster fire of Sea World and the extravagance of a WDW AP (or Magic season tickets or whatever).