How does Royal compare with Disney

Neptune's Fork

DIS Veteran
Joined
Jul 6, 2016
I was in a workplace group discussion today on cruise vacations and a couple of the people were raving about cruising on Royal and saying how it blows away Disney, etc. One of the two had done a Disney cruise on Wonder. My last two cruises were on Disney (Fantasy and Magic), and I've had one on Carnival.

So I was just curious as to what makes Royal so much better, so I figured this was the place to ask.

Any responses can omit a casino response because I could care less about having a smoky casino on board.
 
Any responses can omit a casino response because I could care less about having a smoky casino on board.
Just so we have context, is it because you aren't bothered by having a casino on board (this is common) or that you aren't bothered by cigarette smoke (this is less common)?

I was in a workplace group discussion today on cruise vacations and a couple of the people were raving about cruising on Royal and saying how it blows away Disney, etc. One of the two had done a Disney cruise on Wonder. My last two cruises were on Disney (Fantasy and Magic), and I've had one on Carnival.

So I was just curious as to what makes Royal so much better, so I figured this was the place to ask.
So I feel like your colleagues have engaged in a bit of hyperbole. I don't believe that there is anything on Royal that "blows away" Disney. It's probably more fair to say that Royal and Disney are pretty close in terms of the metrics cruisers care about. However, there are a few areas where I feel Royal does hold a decided advantage - price, activities, number of shows and the opportunity to spend extra money.

Price - this is obvious. Disney cruises costs more than some luxury cruises, yet their competition is the family-friendly brands like Royal and Carnival. This is not necessarily a huge sticking point.

Activities - Disney has the usual cruise activities, plus the Midship Detective Agency game and Aquaduck (on some). Royal has that, plus rock walls, flow rider, ice skating, and a couple of other activities on Oasis/Quantum class ships.

Extra Money - A lesser price brings more ways to separate you from your money (via your SeaPass card). Royal has more specialty restaurants, drink packages and places to shop. And those shops are in places designed for you to see them, whereas there is a good chance that you may never encounter the gift store on a DCL ship.

Coffee - DCL's coffee is complete undrinkable sludge. I'm someone who practically has a cup in hand at all times, and I had to go without for a week. Royal's coffee has a decided advantage in that a) it's brewed, and b) it tastes slightly better than gas station coffee. Yes, this is a backhanded compliment.

******
Now, there are some notable differences, which are good or bad depending on your opinion:
Specialty restaurants - there are generally more of these, and they allow kids to eat there.

Royal Promenade - This does feel like a stretch of indoor mall at times, but I cannot tell you how much I missed not having this when I was on Fantasy and it was raining on a sea day.

Dining - No rotational dining. I don't feel like this is a big deal either way, but you may feel different.

Kids Clubs - The structure of Oceaneers vs Adventure Ocean are noticeably different. Oceaneers has activities, but they're structured to be more encompassing across a larger age group. Adventure Ocean's programs are more specific in terms of ages, although this may change if there are less kids in the program. My kids have enjoyed both, and more importantly, they appreciate the things each program brings to the table.

Pools - Oasis class has more pools, and they are not overrun with kids :)

People - There are several Royal ships that have a higher passenger capacity than DCL Fantasy. I haven't been on anything smaller than the Oasis class, so I can't speak to the crowding there. However, I can say that I felt more crowded on the Fantasy than I did on an Oasis class ship. It seems contrary to what the numbers might tell you, I know, but it might have been that the percentage of kids was lower. OTOH, having about 2000 more people unloaded onto a private beach makes for a more crowded experience there.

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There are some areas where I think things are roughly the same:
Cabin service - I can't say that I've had a cabin steward that was more exceptional or much worse than any other. I do think that DCL does a better job, but again it's probably a few little things here and there.

Dinner service - Service can vary quite a bit depending on who you get. I would say that the service on my last two cruises (Fantasy and Harmony) was the best I've had, and that the servers absolutely earned the extra gratuities we gave them.

Food - Like service, it can vary a lot. The best food I've had was on the (old) Regal Princess in 2006-2007, and that was due in part to a dessert chef who made some amazing souffles. Every. Single. Night. But overall I can't say that food has ever been so bad that it was inedible.

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And then there are some things that Disney does better
Private Beach - I've not been to Coco Cay, but Castaway Cay is nicer than Labadee, if only because the main beach is less rocky. My opinion here might be tempered with the fact that there were more people on the beach at Labadee than there were at Castaway Cay.

Quality of shows - No surprise here, but Disney's theatre shows are quite good. Mind you, Royal's aqua shows are also very good, but those are exclusive to the Oasis class, and aren't enough to tip the tables in their favour, IMO.

Characters - Yes, Royal has Dreamworks characters. But I'm not a big fan of the non-speaking characters. When you see the princesses and how they interact with guests, that's what impresses me.

I might add on more. That's probably quite a bit for now.
 
Just so we have context, is it because you aren't bothered by having a casino on board (this is common) or that you aren't bothered by cigarette smoke (this is less common)?


So I feel like your colleagues have engaged in a bit of hyperbole. I don't believe that there is anything on Royal that "blows away" Disney. It's probably more fair to say that Royal and Disney are pretty close in terms of the metrics cruisers care about. However, there are a few areas where I feel Royal does hold a decided advantage - price, activities, number of shows and the opportunity to spend extra money.

Price - this is obvious. Disney cruises costs more than some luxury cruises, yet their competition is the family-friendly brands like Royal and Carnival. This is not necessarily a huge sticking point.

Activities - Disney has the usual cruise activities, plus the Midship Detective Agency game and Aquaduck (on some). Royal has that, plus rock walls, flow rider, ice skating, and a couple of other activities on Oasis/Quantum class ships.

Extra Money - A lesser price brings more ways to separate you from your money (via your SeaPass card). Royal has more specialty restaurants, drink packages and places to shop. And those shops are in places designed for you to see them, whereas there is a good chance that you may never encounter the gift store on a DCL ship.

Coffee - DCL's coffee is complete undrinkable sludge. I'm someone who practically has a cup in hand at all times, and I had to go without for a week. Royal's coffee has a decided advantage in that a) it's brewed, and b) it tastes slightly better than gas station coffee. Yes, this is a backhanded compliment.

******
Now, there are some notable differences, which are good or bad depending on your opinion:
Specialty restaurants - there are generally more of these, and they allow kids to eat there.

Royal Promenade - This does feel like a stretch of indoor mall at times, but I cannot tell you how much I missed not having this when I was on Fantasy and it was raining on a sea day.

Dining - No rotational dining. I don't feel like this is a big deal either way, but you may feel different.

Kids Clubs - The structure of Oceaneers vs Adventure Ocean are noticeably different. Oceaneers has activities, but they're structured to be more encompassing across a larger age group. Adventure Ocean's programs are more specific in terms of ages, although this may change if there are less kids in the program. My kids have enjoyed both, and more importantly, they appreciate the things each program brings to the table.

Pools - Oasis class has more pools, and they are not overrun with kids :)

People - There are several Royal ships that have a higher passenger capacity than DCL Fantasy. I haven't been on anything smaller than the Oasis class, so I can't speak to the crowding there. However, I can say that I felt more crowded on the Fantasy than I did on an Oasis class ship. It seems contrary to what the numbers might tell you, I know, but it might have been that the percentage of kids was lower. OTOH, having about 2000 more people unloaded onto a private beach makes for a more crowded experience there.

******
There are some areas where I think things are roughly the same:
Cabin service - I can't say that I've had a cabin steward that was more exceptional or much worse than any other. I do think that DCL does a better job, but again it's probably a few little things here and there.

Dinner service - Service can vary quite a bit depending on who you get. I would say that the service on my last two cruises (Fantasy and Harmony) was the best I've had, and that the servers absolutely earned the extra gratuities we gave them.

Food - Like service, it can vary a lot. The best food I've had was on the (old) Regal Princess in 2006-2007, and that was due in part to a dessert chef who made some amazing souffles. Every. Single. Night. But overall I can't say that food has ever been so bad that it was inedible.

******
And then there are some things that Disney does better
Private Beach - I've not been to Coco Cay, but Castaway Cay is nicer than Labadee, if only because the main beach is less rocky. My opinion here might be tempered with the fact that there were more people on the beach at Labadee than there were at Castaway Cay.

Quality of shows - No surprise here, but Disney's theatre shows are quite good. Mind you, Royal's aqua shows are also very good, but those are exclusive to the Oasis class, and aren't enough to tip the tables in their favour, IMO.

Characters - Yes, Royal has Dreamworks characters. But I'm not a big fan of the non-speaking characters. When you see the princesses and how they interact with guests, that's what impresses me.

I might add on more. That's probably quite a bit for now.



I have to pretty much echo all of this (thanks for saving me the typing!)

We have done a cruise of RCL's Oasis and Freedom (western and eastern Carib) and then HAL's Volendam (Alaska) and then on the Fantasy (Eastern) - we feel that we enjoyed our cruises on Oasis and Fantasy equally, and even though our cruise on the Fantasy was booked on a VGT, it still cost double the Oasis...right now I can't see us going back to Disney due to the difference in cost - being from Canada we also add on a cost for the exchange.

I agree on the above things, other than we have visited Coco Cay, and it is similar to Castaway, we preferred the food on Oasis (and HAL's food was much better than both) but I certainly wouldn't say Royal blows away Disney, other than in price.
 
I preferred the rccl kids clubs for under 12. I have shy kids and they really just got lost in the crowd on dcl. Which seemed like a daycare center without much counselor interaction. Otoh my 13+ teen loved dcl teen space much better than rccl.
Otherwise, I would choose dcl over rccl for food, movies, cabin layout, entertainment, characters, and pixie dust. My other older teens strongly prefer dcl even though they never stepped foot into the teen club.
 


I didn't care for the Dreamworks characters - they're terrible in comparison to Disney characters from an acting perspective. Although our Fiona was very good.

I felt DCL had more activities for the whole family to enjoy together than RCCL. And our kids far preferred DCL's kids club. I thought RCCL was a disappointment - with very few "special" activities that were different from things they could do at camps at home.
 
I didn't care for the Dreamworks characters - they're terrible in comparison to Disney characters from an acting perspective. Although our Fiona was very good.
I assume that the DCL character players are required to go through the same training that the park people go through. I don't know that the people portraying the DW characters are any better than those people at a Six Flags or Cedar Fair park.

I felt DCL had more activities for the whole family to enjoy together than RCCL. And our kids far preferred DCL's kids club. I thought RCCL was a disappointment - with very few "special" activities that were different from things they could do at camps at home.
To be honest, this is what I expect out of the kids clubs. Maybe there's a bit of a cruise slant to it, but "glorified summer camp" works for me, and it worked for the kids. They also liked Oceaneers, although I wasn't a fan since it was more chaotic.
 
To be honest, this is what I expect out of the kids clubs. Maybe there's a bit of a cruise slant to it, but "glorified summer camp" works for me, and it worked for the kids. They also liked Oceaneers, although I wasn't a fan since it was more chaotic.

For the expense of a cruise, I expected a bit better to be honest. Otherwise I could leave my kids at a cheaper summer camp at home. Royal promised me cool activities on their website but then my kids played gaga ball and various circle games for most of the cruise. DCL had the cool kids area with neat touches that camps at home don't have.

Anyway, that's just us and reasons I pay for a cruise. Oh well, my kids are teens now and rapidly aging out of all this. I do also expect special entertainment and cool activities for us adults that I can't get at home.
 


No, I don't think they were engaging in hyperbole, they were just opinionated types. So in their world Disney was like a carnival whereas Royal was like Disney World (no irony intended). It sounds to me like, from the feedback so far, that people are basically saying they are equal? One is better in some things and the other better in other things?
 
That’s pretty much it. For sure, people have preferences (I like Royal better, for example) but at the end of the day it’s unlikely you’ll regret going on either one.
 
I've been on Disney Magic and for Royal, a couple of older ships plus recently the Allure (Oasis class)....Magic and Allure were with our kids. We have Symphony booked in the future with them as well.

I love Disney parks, but for cruises, I really like both but I'm more of a Royal fan.

Disney is more expensive. Shows are amazing and all will entertain kids. Kids will not be bored during the cruise.

To me, Disney is a ship that caters to kids. Royal is a ship that caters to families and non-families. As an adult, I found more things to do on Royal (i.e. was bored when our kids were busy when on Magic ship).

It's hard to just say Royal since they have so many different ships, so I am going to talk more of Allure...one of the bigger newer ships. They have a full Broadway show, which is first class. They also have Aqua show, ice shows, and other DreamWorks shows that are enjoyed by the whole family. All very impressive. The Headliners, depending on who it is, may bore or not be appropriate for kids. (The one that we had was actually more interest to y 6 year old than to me...but it just wan't my style of music, whereas she is open to everything)

Tons of food options at Royal - lots included, plus some specialty with extra charge. It is also flexible where you can book a set time (early or late seating) or you can do 'My Time'...and with that, you can make reservations for the time you like each night, or just show up when you are there and wait like a normal restaurant for a table.
Rotational dining worked well too on Disney.

Bigger and more pools on Royal. The Disney ones got so crowded that you could sit in them but not swim or do much. However, not all Royal ships have waterslides. There are other fun and different activities though such as Rock Wall, Flowrider, Zip Line (Oasis class), and Quantum class has other cool stuff. There are also other fun activities going on that is posted in the cruise compass each day . The Boardwalk area is fun with kids... and Central park is nice to walk through. There is also a parade on the Promenade that is fun.

Royal also has different kinds of staterooms that are fun. We had an inside Promenade which we actually enjoyed, and next have a Boardwalk balcony booked. The washrooms are better on Disney with the sink separate from the rest (from that I remember).

Our kids had a lot of fun with the DreamWorks characters. There weren't line ups like on Disney, but also, it was more of a 'get your photo taken' meetings. There was a bit of interaction depending on the character, but more on Disney ship. We did the character breakfast (small fee) and enjoyed it. There was also an extra Aqua and Ice Show with DreamWorks.

I can't comment on the kids club as our kids weren't interested in it on Allure. My son did like the one on Magic and we did a few open house activities with our younger one. (Otherwise, she was under 3 so couldn't go). With Royal though, they do have scheduled activities with a kids cruise compass and it looked pretty good.

Do you have a particular ship in mind? If going with kids, I recommend Oasis class, and if you want something smaller, then one with DreamWorks as you know it caters to kids.
 
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I've been on both and my kids and my spouse much preferred RCL. Disney is shameful in the amount of real estate they devote to pools. The food is comparable. Shows are good on both. Price is no competition. They both blow away the other cruiselines but RCL is better.
 
We prefer royal. Actually, we prefer cruising, so a line that allows for more of that is better. :)

Price is better. Aesthetics for us is better. Are better? Hmm.

Vegetarian foods are about the same. I have my faves and my ughs on both lines.

I don’t care one little bit about rotational dining. To me all it does is make things slightly more confusing.

Pools are cold but better on royal.

I preferred the rccl kids clubs for under 12. I have shy kids and they really just got lost in the crowd on dcl. Which seemed like a daycare center without much counselor interaction.

Agreed. And I have an extrovert!! He likes adults and likes how the royal counselors get to know the kids. He’s just one in a sea of faces on Disney. On royal they know him by name even outside the club by day 2.

I didn't care for the Dreamworks characters - they're terrible in comparison to Disney characters from an acting perspective. Although our Fiona was very good.

My tiny experience is opposite. Wrll, not opposite somce I avoid characters on dcl. But the one (and only, bc the food was so bad) time we did the dreamworks breakfast the characters were terrific. Po actually got a smile out of me, and as a lifelong characterphobe that’s BIG.

DCL had the cool kids area with neat touches that camps at home don't have.

Hmm. DS played loads of gagaball on dcl. And he said they play it wrong.

Other than that they talk down to the kids (his experience on our cruises...he despises being talked down to), and they let them just play alone. Lots of video games. We have that at home. He did like the lightup floor for dancing on dream, but then they dance on Royal, too.
 
I preferred the rccl kids clubs for under 12. I have shy kids and they really just got lost in the crowd on dcl. Which seemed like a daycare center without much counselor interaction. Otoh my 13+ teen loved dcl teen space much better than rccl.
Otherwise, I would choose dcl over rccl for food, movies, cabin layout, entertainment, characters, and pixie dust. My other older teens strongly prefer dcl even though they never stepped foot into the teen club.
My kids were never crazy about the Oceaneer's club, but love the Edge and Vibe on DCL. Luckily they were able to start going to Edge at age 10 before DCL changed their policy on that. When I read posts on here where people state they need to take another dcl cruise on here before their kids outgrow it...I'm like hold on. I honestly think DCL does a better jobs with the teens then they do with the little kids. Daycare is a good word for it. The one thing about DCL is there's always lots of teens onboard anytime of year. Due to price parents will pull their kids out of school to cruise on DCL....or there's just a lot of homeschooler's on DCL. We cruised Nov 11 and there were 70 vibe kids.
 
there are only two things that in my opinion Disney does better: their shows are far superior and their adult only areas are actually policed to be adult only.

we hated the rotational dining. we hated most of the food( only really liked the cold soups and a few appetizers) in the MDR and Buffet. y only enjoyed our specialty dining meals.

Cabins: for the price of a navigator balcony on Disney we can get a full suite on Royal with all the attendant perks.
specialty dining: okay, slight teeny tiny edge to Disney here. the brunch is worth it. no such comparable concept on Royal.

crew: welp to be perfectly frank, I felt the Disney crew were too smug and snooty. not very personable at all except for our assistant waiter. I got a LOT of rolled eyes when I passed on dessert every night( nothing remotely appealed to me) or only ordered 2-3 courses. never once saw hide nor hair of the cabin steward .

activities: as we do not have kids the fact that most activities encouraged their participation was not appealing at all. their adult only things all had a (hefty) price tag.
 
I sailed on more Disney Cruises than any other cruise line but I last year I sailed on Royal's Anthem of the Seas. Comparing that one Royal's ship to all of the Disney's ships I can honestly say that on the Anthem of the Seas that ship had better activities for families and adults. I also thought the technology around the ship was impressive including the virtual balcony room I stayed in which exceeded anything that Disney currently offers. However Disney does exceed when it comes to entertainment and service. I also found that Disney's food in the MDR was slightly better than Royal's food. Also Disney's staterooms seem larger than Royal's staterooms (comparing my room and my friends rooms on Royal). Obviously I'm partial to Disney but I'm open to trying different cruise lines if the itinerary is something I'm interested in.
 
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We've done a few Disney cruises and many Royal cruises. For our family, Royal is better. Ice skating, bumper cars, indoor skydiving, zip line, roller skating, circus school...I could go on. There is so much to do on the newer/larger Royal ships!

Our kids don't like kids' clubs in general, so that's not a factor for us. We don't care too much about the shows either. Add to that the extra cost of a Disney cruise, and Royal comes out way ahead.
 
Just this month I cruised Royal with 3 kids without DH and then he joined us for Disney Magic. He had cruised Royal in the past. So this perspective comes from cruising with kids.

We sailed on the Majesty. On the small side but I paid $43.75 per night per person (not including tax or tip) for the cruise. I bought wifi and nothing else. My kids noticed the drinking. It was hard not to notice the drinking and the drunks. And we had to walk through bars and the casino A LOT. We saw 2 comedians. Both were very good and relatively clean (for a general audience show.) The musical shows, though, they were awful.The buffet was hard for me (gluten-free) but the kids didn't mind it. Dinner in the dining room was a huge hit, though. I traveled with 2 teen boys and a 10 year old girl. The boys ate and ate and ate. One son ordered two or three dinners every night. And one night I watched the two of them devour 10 chocolate souffles. The service was impeccable. We had oceanview adjoining rooms (2 per room.) They were fine for two though they did have an upper berth. We didn't get off the ship in Nassau and couldn't tender at Coco Cay, so we were on the ship the whole time. My daughter liked the activities although there were very few kids on this cruise. My teens wanted no part of the teen activities, though. The pools were very cold. My kids were less than enthused about hanging out in hot tubs with drunks. That being said, we had more downtime since there wasn't so much to do. Now, we travel with a transport chair. Royal Caribbean made sure that we went to the correct lines, window, etc.

So then a week later we boarded the Disney Magic. I was really surprised that they didn't have any sort of disability services at the port since Disney is so fabulous about it in their parks. Check in was slow. We also had adjoining oceanview staterooms on the Magic. Huge difference from Royal. Now this one cost me $86 per night per person (not including tax or tip) so fully double what I paid on Royal. We had second seating. It was slow. And everyone was rather underwhelmed with the food and the choices. Now the shows, that is where Disney won. Too loud for dh but the kids and I loved them. We liked how little drinking there was. We liked less cigarette smoke and no casino. And we liked the warmer pools. My daughter could have lived in Oceaneer Club the whole time if given the choice. My teens went to Vibe a little bit. But seeing Thor, Coco and The Last Jedi (the night before it released) was a definite homerun to them. Now the downfall of the Disney cruise to them, was the amount of children.

So we had two entirely different experiences yet both were great. We have one trip left in us (we are pretty tripped out.) So we have one more week in WDW before the passes come down until Star Wars Land. I shortened our trip and gave them an option for another cruise (again, it costs me more to feed them at Disney.) We had a few options: a 10 night out of NYC on Norwegian ($31 per night interior), a Royal Oasis 7 night trip ($73 per night interior) or Disney Wonder 4 night ($55 per night oceanview.) We discussed all of our options and the teens were pretty clear that they much preferred Disney over Royal.
 
This sounds about right to me. Can't really complain about the price for Majesty but it is a pretty small - and old - ship. I'm not adverse to the smaller ships but I do think that the larger vessels have more to offer for the kids, especially when you choose to stay onboard or if it's a rain day. I don't mind the casino and will partake in some of the table games on the non-smoking side (although 6:5 payouts on a Blackjack sucks), but I do like it if it's positioned such that it's avoidable (since there does tend to be a bit of smoking there and the kids don't need to smell that). Doesn't sound like that's the case on Majesty.

Too bad about the drunks. I know I've done my share of excessive drinking when I was younger, but mostly at house parties so I likely only ruined dozens of people's enjoyment as opposed to 3-or-4 digits worth of people. No excuses on my part though, and I like to think I learned from my younger days.

Also agree about the amount of kids on a DCL. Completely expected, of course, but it can be overwhelming at times. Agreed about the shows as well. But I'm not really a fan of musicals, so my position here may be suspect.

And one night I watched the two of them devour 10 chocolate souffles.
Back on the old Regal Princess (2006-2007, pre-kids) there was a dessert chef who specialized in souffles. I say without exaggeration that these were some of the best souffles I've ever had, and even more impressive considering that they needed to make this for a large number of people each night.

Aside - we are tentatively booked on the Caribbean Princess for end of August. If we lock that down I'll be sure to at least summarize my trip along with comparisons to my previous Royal and DCL cruises. It looks like a pretty good ship for the kids so I'm definitely interested in how they will like it.
 
This sounds about right to me. Can't really complain about the price for Majesty but it is a pretty small - and old - ship. I'm not adverse to the smaller ships but I do think that the larger vessels have more to offer for the kids, especially when you choose to stay onboard or if it's a rain day. I don't mind the casino and will partake in some of the table games on the non-smoking side (although 6:5 payouts on a Blackjack sucks), but I do like it if it's positioned such that it's avoidable (since there does tend to be a bit of smoking there and the kids don't need to smell that). Doesn't sound like that's the case on Majesty.

Too bad about the drunks. I know I've done my share of excessive drinking when I was younger, but mostly at house parties so I likely only ruined dozens of people's enjoyment as opposed to 3-or-4 digits worth of people. No excuses on my part though, and I like to think I learned from my younger days.


Also agree about the amount of kids on a DCL. Completely expected, of course, but it can be overwhelming at times. Agreed about the shows as well. But I'm not really a fan of musicals, so my position here may be suspect.


Back on the old Regal Princess (2006-2007, pre-kids) there was a dessert chef who specialized in souffles. I say without exaggeration that these were some of the best souffles I've ever had, and even more impressive considering that they needed to make this for a large number of people each night.

Aside - we are tentatively booked on the Caribbean Princess for end of August. If we lock that down I'll be sure to at least summarize my trip along with comparisons to my previous Royal and DCL cruises. It looks like a pretty good ship for the kids so I'm definitely interested in how they will like it.

ITA

My kids are big fans of RCCL but I think they would be bored out of their mind on Majesty. I know everyone is different but if I'm going with my teens I won't sail on anything smaller than Voyager class.

My last few cruise have been on Freedom class ships I completely avoided the casino.

Smaller, older ships with shorter itineraries usually have more of a party, booze cruise vibe.
 
Aside - we are tentatively booked on the Caribbean Princess for end of August. If we lock that down I'll be sure to at least summarize my trip along with comparisons to my previous Royal and DCL cruises. It looks like a pretty good ship for the kids so I'm definitely interested in how they will like it.
So it turns out that while the kids program on Princess looks good, there is nothing really for toddlers (my nephew will be 2) like there is on DCL and the larger Royal ships. So it's (again tentatively) a return to Allure, with roughly the same itinerary - Nassau, Cozumel, Roatan (Honduras) and Puerto Costa Maya (Mexico).
 

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