Extremely Slow Staff Frustrate Visitors at German Theme Park
A Dutch vlogger criticized slow operations at Heide Park after waiting far longer than posted for KRAKE. He said a queue advertised at thirty minutes took roughly ninety minutes.
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A visit to Heide Park turned frustrating for Dutch vlogger Niels Kooyman when waits proved far longer than the posted times, according to his account. KRAKE became one of the clearest examples. The dive coaster was advertised with a thirty-minute wait, but he said he spent about ninety minutes in line. The complaint therefore went beyond a single busy moment: it questioned how the park handled capacity, dispatches and visitor expectations. Kooyman also criticized operations elsewhere in the park. At Desert Race, the real wait was longer than the queue board suggested, and he noted trains standing in the station for several minutes. He suspected that long waits might make paid Express Tickets more appealing, though that remained his own interpretation. For visitors, the issue matters because KRAKE is one of Heide Park's headline coasters, and reliable wait information can decide how much of a day is left for other rides. The story adds a practical chapter to KRAKE's history: the experience around a major coaster is shaped not only by the ride itself, but also by capacity and operations.