The constantly changing goal posts is part of the issue. It doesn't matter if this is the most technological advance park etc.
People (Universal execs) dismissed so many things regarding this park. From the need of indoor attractions (Which would have been beneficial during the freezing weather than shut down the parks for multiple days last month) to more capacity being needed even before the park opened, if forums noticed this before executives and park designers without even having the data set, that says way more about the management of the parks being problematic. Eventually, we will see repeated issues if they already lack this much foresight especially when the team should be some of the best in the industry as is.
This is ultimately insulting to the consumer.
There are 13 attractions at Epic Universe not including splash pads/playgrounds. The valuation at peak time and one day ticket (199 per adult with children tickets only being 5 dollars cheaper) each ride is roughly $15.31 dollars per attraction. So when three attractions are down and now have lost approximately 45 dollars, now for a family of four that is $180 dollars of lost value. Is that tolerable for anyone to lose that kind of money? And this is just any three attractions being down. So now lets say Stardust, Battle of the Ministry, Mario Kart are down and then a show goes down. Would anyone here tolerate when you actually look at the numbers a loss of $60 in value? So why are we accepting it from Comcast/Universal?