8 Things We Miss About Disney Cruise Line (And Want Back)

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If you’ve sailed Disney Cruise Line more than a handful of times, you know one thing for sure: it changes. Sometimes those changes are exciting upgrades. Other times, you find yourself standing on the pool deck thinking, “Wait — where did that go?”

After 10+ cruises, the things I miss about Disney Cruise Line add up. None of them are deal-breakers — they’re not going to stop me from booking my next sailing. But if Disney is listening, I’d love to see some of these come back.

Quick Summary

  • Disney Cruise Line has quietly removed or changed many beloved experiences over the years
  • From the Palo Brunch buffet to Cabanas dinners, food options have taken the biggest hit
  • Virtual muster drills and kids’ club meals are also missed
  • Some changes came during COVID and never returned, even as other cruise lines brought them back
  • These aren’t reasons to stop sailing DCL — but they’re things we hope come back someday

1. Color at Animator’s Palate

If you’ve sailed on the original Disney Magic or Wonder, you might remember what Animator’s Palate used to feel like in its earliest days. The lighting and wall effects have evolved over the years — and yes, much of that is an improvement. But one thing that got quietly dropped was the servers themselves changing outfits mid-dinner.

They’d start in black-and-white shirts and ties, then switch to colored jackets, vests, and ties based on their position — all as part of the show. It was a small detail, but it made Animator’s Palate feel like a real live performance. I miss that element of surprise.

2. Dinner in Cabanas

This is the big one. If Disney brought back one thing on this list, I’d vote for dinner at Cabanas.

Before COVID, Cabanas was open for casual dinner — a laid-back, indoor, sit-down alternative to the main dining room rotation. It wasn’t a traditional buffet at dinner time, but it was a flexible, relaxed option with real hours that worked for families who needed a break from rotational dining.

Disney removed it during the shutdown and never brought it back. The pool deck food options are not a replacement — limited hours, outdoor seating, and a fraction of the variety. Every other major cruise line offers some form of casual dinner venue. Disney is the outlier here, and not in a good way.

3. The Pirate Night Buffet

Pirate Night is still one of the best things Disney Cruise Line does — the deck party, the fireworks, the costumes. But what used to come after the fireworks? A full buffet. Disney’s version of the cruise tradition of a ‘midnight buffet’.

Yes, at 10:30 at night, after most guests had already eaten dinner, there was a spread of food waiting on deck. Did anyone need it? Absolutely not. Did they go anyway? Every single time. The Pirate Night buffet was always packed, and it added a fun, festive energy to the end of a great night.

Disney Cruise Line is not the only cruise line that moved away from the ‘midnight buffet’, in fact most cruise lines removed this traditional as well.

4. Entertainment Every Night in the Walt Disney Theatre

Disney Cruise Line has some of the best Broadway-caliber shows at sea. The productions in the Walt Disney Theatre are genuinely impressive. So it was a real disappointment to find out on cruises greater than a 7 night itinerary that some evenings had nothing scheduled in the main theatre at all.

Disney used to fill every evening with something — even if it was just a movie screening, there was always an option. That’s changed, and not for the better. On a long sailing, empty nights in the theatre leave guests scrambling for things to do after dinner.

5. Virtual Muster Drills

This might be the most universally missed item on the list. When Disney Cruise Line resumed sailing after COVID, they introduced a virtual muster drill — guests watched the safety video on their stateroom TV or the Navigator app, then briefly checked in at their muster station. It was fast, efficient, and painless.

Nearly every other major cruise line has kept virtual muster. Disney reverted to the traditional in-person version, which means a long, hot, crowded assembly depending on where your muster station is located. For families with young kids or guests with mobility challenges, it’s a real inconvenience. Bring back virtual muster, Disney.

6. The Palo Brunch Buffet

Palo Brunch used to be one of the crown jewels of Disney Cruise Line. The à la carte menu was always excellent, but the buffet spread was the thing of dreams — pastries, sweet rolls, chocolate-covered strawberries, an extensive seafood display, and more. It was the kind of meal you’d plan your whole sea day around.

Now, Palo Brunch is à la carte only. The meal is still good. But the buffet component is gone, and with it, a lot of the wow factor that made Palo Brunch feel special. This one hurts.

7. Meals in the Kids’ Clubs

Disney Cruise Line’s kids’ clubs — the Oceaneer Club and Lab — are genuinely world-class. But a change that’s quietly made sailing harder for families is the removal of meal service within the clubs.

Kids used to be able to eat in the clubs while they were checked in. Now, parents who want their children to have a proper dinner need to check them out, take them to dinner, and then check them back in. For parents who were using the kids’ club time to enjoy a quiet dinner themselves, that defeats part of the purpose. Bringing back meal service in the clubs would be a meaningful quality-of-life improvement for families.

8. Stricter Dress Codes in Adult Restaurants

This last one may put me in the minority, but here it is: I miss when Palo had a real dress code. The adult-only dining venues on Disney Cruise Line are optional — no one is forced to go. They’re meant to be elevated experiences, and part of what makes an experience feel elevated is the atmosphere, which includes how people dress.

Palo’s dress code has relaxed considerably over the years. I understand that not everyone wants to dress up on vacation, and I respect that. But when you’ve specifically chosen an adults-only fine dining venue, a little more formality doesn’t feel like an unreasonable ask. I’d love to see those standards return.

The Bottom Line on What We Miss About Disney Cruise Line

None of the things I miss about Disney Cruise Line are enough to keep me off the ship. After 10+ cruises, that’s not how this works. Disney Cruise Line still does more things better than almost anyone else at sea — the theming, the service, the entertainment, the attention to detail.

But that doesn’t mean we can’t miss the good things that got left behind. From Cabanas at dinner to the Palo Brunch buffet to the small details of color changing in Animator’s Palette, these are the little extras that made sailing DCL feel even more magical. If you have something you’d add to this list, tag me on social media — I’d love to hear what fellow DCL fans are hoping makes a comeback someday.


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Meet the Author: Nate Bishop

I’m a die-hard Disney fan with 38 years of visits under my belt, having stepped into Disney World 120+ times. Proud to be a Disney Annual Passholder, a Vacation Club member since ’92, a Castaway Club Member, and a runDisney enthusiast. Oh, and I’ve graduated from the Disney College of Knowledge. Need Disney insights or planning tips? I’m your guy!

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