Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which Disney ships did you go on? I think the biggest difference for you will be:
1. Only one bathroom
2. Crowds - Bigger ship, more crowds. If you don’t have main dining room reservations at a set time, you’ll end up waiting. You’ll need tickets for events rather than just showing up. Hunting for seats in the buffet or on deck. (We prefer smaller ships…and crew members we’ve chatted with on Disney, Royal, and Celebrity agreed; they commented that you don’t get the same level of service on bigger ships.)
Disagree on the need for main dining reservations. We had anytime dining and showed up every night with never more than a moment's wait. It was great to have the flexibility as we had a port heavy itinerary and were back on the ship at different times each day.
Anonymous wrote:Which Disney ships did you go on? I think the biggest difference for you will be:
1. Only one bathroom
2. Crowds - Bigger ship, more crowds. If you don’t have main dining room reservations at a set time, you’ll end up waiting. You’ll need tickets for events rather than just showing up. Hunting for seats in the buffet or on deck. (We prefer smaller ships…and crew members we’ve chatted with on Disney, Royal, and Celebrity agreed; they commented that you don’t get the same level of service on bigger ships.)
This is overly pessimistic. Nice RCL ships on an expensive week will have a more upscale crowd. And RCL has more for teens. We had a great time on our cruise.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you will be disappointed if you expect it to be similar to Disney. Expect it to be less nice than Disney. It is not as nice in many ways and yet it is not bad. But it is also generally less expensive and with many more ships in its fleet, Royal Caribbean is a line I have cruised from time to time based on the itinerary. Disney cabins are big compared to most lines. Disney ships pay much more attention to little details than most ships. Disney obviously skews family friendly and that is simply not the case so if you are traveling with young children, you may find that some things aren’t for the family at all. Some comedy or cruise games can be very mature. Just avoid that stuff.
This. It is budget. i've done the Royal Caribbean line. It was great when I was a stupid student but not now
Anonymous wrote:I think you will be disappointed if you expect it to be similar to Disney. Expect it to be less nice than Disney. It is not as nice in many ways and yet it is not bad. But it is also generally less expensive and with many more ships in its fleet, Royal Caribbean is a line I have cruised from time to time based on the itinerary. Disney cabins are big compared to most lines. Disney ships pay much more attention to little details than most ships. Disney obviously skews family friendly and that is simply not the case so if you are traveling with young children, you may find that some things aren’t for the family at all. Some comedy or cruise games can be very mature. Just avoid that stuff.
If you can afford it, upgrade to the junior suite. It's cheaper than two rooms, a bit bigger than a normal balcony room, and you get access to the suites-only restaurant, which has much much better food than the main dining rooms.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a fantastic time on Harmony which I believe is similar. Don't do the specialty dining--just eat the free food most of the time, get some Starbucks or little things if you need to. Definitely see the high dive show if they are still doing it. The dry slides are awesome, water slides were ok not amazing. Assuming you have two rooms so the teens are together? We put the teens in an interior and we got a balcony for us across the hall.
Thank you! We just did a family balcony room, which I know will be really tight. We couldn’t justify the expense of two rooms when the kids are rarely in the room on DCL and we’re dealing with spring break prices.
Anonymous wrote:I think you will be disappointed if you expect it to be similar to Disney. Expect it to be less nice than Disney. It is not as nice in many ways and yet it is not bad. But it is also generally less expensive and with many more ships in its fleet, Royal Caribbean is a line I have cruised from time to time based on the itinerary. Disney cabins are big compared to most lines. Disney ships pay much more attention to little details than most ships. Disney obviously skews family friendly and that is simply not the case so if you are traveling with young children, you may find that some things aren’t for the family at all. Some comedy or cruise games can be very mature. Just avoid that stuff.
Anonymous wrote:We had a fantastic time on Harmony which I believe is similar. Don't do the specialty dining--just eat the free food most of the time, get some Starbucks or little things if you need to. Definitely see the high dive show if they are still doing it. The dry slides are awesome, water slides were ok not amazing. Assuming you have two rooms so the teens are together? We put the teens in an interior and we got a balcony for us across the hall.