Nintendo’s Big Mario Kart Ride At Universal Can Only Be Ridden By Thin People - Fatties get off...

Nintendo’s Big Mario Kart Ride At Universal Can Only Be Ridden By Thin People​

Universal Studios Hollywood’s latest ride bars attendees with a waistline over 40 inches​


Super Nintendo World, the latest addition to Universal Hollywood’s theme park, is set to open in just a few weeks, giving Mario fans the opportunity to step into a vivid recreation of the Mushroom Kingdom, packed with sights and sounds they know and love. Not all of them, however, will be able to experience the featured attraction Mario Kart: Bowser’s Challenge, as it has a very specific requirement: Your waistline must not be 40 inches or larger.

An elaborate “3D and 4D ride,” according to the official page for Mario Kart: Bowser’s Challenge, the single-user ride takes attendees through a variety of Mario-themed settings brought to life with “cutting-edge technology.” On the ride, you’ll individually or collectively team up to foil Team Bowser’s plans to grab that golden cup before Mario and friends do. But as The Wall Street Journal observed in an article highlighting the limiting weight requirements, (which can be found on the official app for park navigation and line management) “Guests whose waistline is at least 40” or greater may not be accommodated on the ride.” The app’s copy indicates that there’s a test seat available to gauge whether or not an attendee meets these requirements. Given that the average waist circumference in the U.S. is just around 40 inches, this certainly seems likely to exclude a good number of folks.

“Nothing but wonderful things to say about Super Nintendo World except this,” opens one tweet from YouTuber and “Food influencer,” Rocco Botte, “the body size limitations on the Mario Kart ride are absolutely ridiculous.

Another popular tweet calls out the absurdity of such a strict waist limitation. “A 40” waist line is about a [women’s] size 20.”

According to CDC statistics cited by Healthline, the average clothing size for adults assigned female at birth hovers between 18 to 20. As many replies to the tweet above indicate, a 40-inch waist is a “very normal and common size to be for many body types.” And Mario Kart: Bowser’s Challenge isn’t the only ride with such strict limitations. At least four other Universal Studios rides, including Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey and Revenge of the Mummy — the Ride also cite the same 40-inch limit, with suggestions that attendees ought to use the test seat to determine if the ride can accommodate them.

As The Wall Street Journal found out, such test seats are hardly accurate and aren’t terribly private. “Visitors say the tryouts can be awkward [and] less forgiving than the actual seats on the ride,” the paper reports.

The waistline requirement particularly stings as Mario Kart: Bowser’s Challenge is the only ride to be featured at Super Nintendo World, yet it’s not designed to accommodate average or plus size attendees’ physical dimensions.
Kotaku has reached out to Universal Studios Hollywood for comment.

 
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I find it hard to believe Disney would have designed a ride that excludes a significant percentage of the population. Doesn't any make sense from a business perspective.

They're probably taking the average rather than the median so the deathfats are distorting it. I think that's who's really bitching about this.
 
I find it hard to believe Disney would have designed a ride that excludes a significant percentage of the population. Doesn't any make sense from a business perspective.

They're probably taking the average rather than the median so the deathfats are distorting it. I think that's who's really bitching about this.
Not Disney. Says Universal Studios.
 
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I was thinking Disney for some reason. Point still stands, I don't think Universal would build out a ride without market research.
Universal the company that manages it according to wikipedia but I don't think it's surprising that a Japanese company designed a ride largely intended for Japanese people and didn't care about the extremely small percentage of foreigners that go there.

Japanese people generally are not obese for a number of reasons but one major one is because it's extremely looked down upon there. Like they have these mandatory annual physicals and if the doctor rates someone as obese they tell their employer and they start hounding them to lose weight.
 
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