I would like to see them do away with tiers also
What's the point of tiers in everyone's opinion (or if there is some factual information out there?)
Tiers seemingly are for the parks that don't have a lot of "RIDE" (non-show) attractions where "everyone" will want the few top attractions there, right? So it helps spread fast passes to attractions that people normally wouldn't take. But to what end? So what if Living with the Land doesn't have a fastpass queue? Just to give guests the illusion of skipping a line (that wouldn't exist if people weren't "forced" to take an awful Tier 2 fastpass?)
At Epcot .. there are only two rides really worth getting a FP for .. Soaring and Test Track. Without tiers .. EVERYONE would book those two attractions.
Same with DHS .. they've had only 4-5 "rides" since FP+ came online. Everyone would just book the big three .. TSMM and Rock n Roller Coaster and the Great Movie Ride (before it closed).
But why did AK never have tiering until Pandora? It only had 6 rides (if you can even call the carnival rides in Dinoland that). So wasn't everyone getting FP for Everest, Safari and then something else? (That's what I've done). Besides Dinosaur and River Rapids, the rest of the park is walk through attractions or shows. How did it "survive" without tiering?
So why is their tiering? To help everyone get a shot at a high demand attraction? Even with tiering, the Pandora rides are practically impossible to get at 60 days. Without tiering, at its peak Seven Dwarves Mine Train and the A&E meet and greet (when it was at MK) were also impossible to get at 60 days.
So what if someone at 30 days or less can't get a FP to a brand new attraction? Chances are (even with tiering) they wouldn't anyway.
So, is the point of tiering just to keep you in the park longer (by waiting in longer lines)? (thus spending money on food, snacks, souvenirs and not hopping to another park)? Perhaps because Disney wants you to potentially add another day to your trip so you can do ALL the new attractions during your trip without having to waiting in 2 hour plus lines?
If that is the point of tiering, than yes .. we will see tiering in DHS and Epcot for many years to go as they continue to pump out new attractions there (but hopefully that means that older "Tier 1" attractions will fall to Tier 2).