Re: Celebration 2020, Anaheim
Posted: Wed Jun 24, 2020 9:07 pm
A really tricky one to predict how fast the new 2022 tickets might sell, but I think there is a real risk they will be even crazier than 2020 because there will be many fewer, and it will have been a few years since the last one.
If you are happy to write the already purchased tickets off as a sunk cost, then from a decision analytic point of view, the best strategy is to keep your 3 passes and try and get a Saturday pass (from memory, 4 day passes sold out faster than any single day in 2020)... that way the best scenario is having all four tickets, but the worst is still having tickets for 3 days. You could save some money with different strategies, but it'd be a gamble as to how many tickets/days you end up with.
If you are happy to write the already purchased tickets off as a sunk cost, then from a decision analytic point of view, the best strategy is to keep your 3 passes and try and get a Saturday pass (from memory, 4 day passes sold out faster than any single day in 2020)... that way the best scenario is having all four tickets, but the worst is still having tickets for 3 days. You could save some money with different strategies, but it'd be a gamble as to how many tickets/days you end up with.
r2d2 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 23, 2020 12:47 pm I'm looking for some advice! I missed out on the four day SW Celebration four day pass and only managed to purchase the Thursday, Friday and Sunday separate day passes. The cost of three separate days all came to worth more than the four day pass! Now with Star Wars Celebration 2020 officially postponed to 2022, should I request a refund and try to purchase a four day pass, or just live with missing out on the Saturday in 2022?