If you have any questions about whether the accessibility bus is suitable for you, please email our team at and they will assist as best they can. Car parking spaces are limited and MUST be booked in advance. The Forest is accessible to some wheelchair users but we recommend you check out the review on Euan’s Guide for more detailed information on the walk and gradients to assess whether it is suited to your specific access needs prior to booking.įor those disabled visitors who require direct access to site we will try to accommodate them with a car parking space. Tickets cannot be transferred between main departures and accessibility. If you intend to book the accessibility bus, please ensure you are signed up for our e-newsletter here to receive advance notification of when this goes on sale. We are taking some time to review the accessibilty bus service for 2023 and tickets will not be available for this until this review has been completed. There are no discounts for carers or for disabled customers. Our Accessibility Bus may be a better solution for you. We have limited spaces on site so if you are able to travel to the event via bus, please leave these spaces for customers who really need them. Our autism friendly performances are open to all visitors, it’s the numbers attending in this departure time slot that are restricted.ĭisabled Car Passes can be booked to enable you to park on site at the event by emailing and providing your booking reference number. Thursday 2nd & Friday 3rd November at 5.00pm.Wednesday 25th & Saturday 28th October at 5.00pm.Thursday 19th & Friday 20th October at 5.15pm.Wednesday 11th & Saturday 14th October at 5.30pm.Thursday 5th & Friday 6th October at 5.45pm. Our Autism Friendly departure times will be: Smaller capacity shows so that less people are going out on site with you so it won’t feel too busy.Right at the start of the bus queues, before any crowds have started to build up.Right at the start of the night so you’ll be first on site and practically have the forest to yourselves.We know that big noisy queues, lots of people on site and crowds can sometimes be a little overwhelming and spoil the enjoyment of an otherwise exceptionally engaging experience for our autistic customers and their families. In fact, the creators have confirmed this fact on their official Facebook page: "We are avids fans of Cuphead and were inspired by it to create something similar, but we're trying to give it a different spin and making it our own thing."Įnchanted Portals borrows a lot from Cuphead, including the rubber hose animation style (defined by jointless, "rubber hose" limbs), run-and-gun, boss-centric gameplay model, and even the jaunty jazz music.įor reference, here's the Enchanted Portals trailer:Įnchanted Portals Kickstarter Trailer And here's the trailer for Cuphead:Ĭuphead E3 2015 Trailer for Xbox One So right up front, Enchanted Portals does, indeed, appear to be overwhelmingly inspired by Cuphead.Our autism friendly performances will be returning for our 2023 event Judging from the trailer, Enchanted Portals is stylistically derivative of Cuphead in just about every way. But.so what? The game is a clear homage to Cuphead. That doesn't make it plagiarism, or anything even close. It doesn't steal the source code, it doesn't steal the world or the characters, and until the game comes out, nobody even knows if or how it builds upon the general mechanics. Moreover, Cuphead didn't invent rubber hose animation, which was popularized by classic Disney cartoons of the 1930s. It didn't invent run-and-gun gameplay or boss-centric shoot-em-ups, either, which can be respectively attributed to '80s arcade franchises like Contra and Mega Man for NES. The real genius of Cuphead was combining these elements in such a neat, well-designed package. But Cuphead does not hold a monopoly on this style or concept, all of which are also derivative of other artistic things that came before it. To be clear, if anyone doesn't want to play Enchanted Portals because it's so obviously based on Cuphead, that's totally within their rights. At the same time, it's very strange that anybody is so angry about it. The developers never pretended that it wasn't directly inspired by Cuphead. What exactly makes this one worthy of so much hatred? Drawing upon and even reskinning previous games isn't exactly new within the video game world. Sure, the new game might be banking on love and recognition of something already popular and established, but this is incredibly common within literally every artform in existence. That's why popular things are called "trendsetters": ecause they start trends. God of War spawned countless "beefy dude hacking things up" clones.
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