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What This Creator Said
Creator Had Mixed FeelingsTips & Advice🥈Expert Creator

Source: Our analysis of the creator's lived experience, based on what they said in this video.

Creator's Key Takeaways

Why are today's cruise ships becoming so gigantic?

The phrase bigger is better is still the mantra of the world's largest cruise lines

Larger ships generally have lower operating costs per passenger

Luxury lines tend to favor smaller ships, not only for service and amenities, but also because they can access destinations larger ships simply can't reach

Creator's Tips & Advice

Consider that larger ships may offer more amenities but could limit destination access
Be aware that economies of scale can lower costs but may not always mean better value

Questions This Creator Answers

QWhy are cruise ships getting bigger?
QIs bigger always better for cruise ships?

Topics Covered

Water Park2 Happy BaconPort Destination1½ Happy BaconCrowd Capacity1 Happy BaconValue Pricing1 Happy BaconItinerary Route1 Happy Bacon

Port Highlights

Fort Lauderdale1 Happy Bacon
Grand Bahama Island1½ Happy Bacon
Miami1 Happy Bacon
How to read the Trip Bacon Score
Happy Bacon — creators loved this aspect
Sad Bacon — creators took issue with this
Meh — no strong opinion either way

Scale: 0–5 strips in half-step increments. 0 = “meh”, 5 = “bacon bliss”. Aggregated from creator-review sentiment, weighted by channel expertise.

About our Bacon Score methodology
YouTube Video Description

Why Cruise Ships Keep Getting Bigger & Better??? === #cruisenow #cruiseship #cruisenews #cruise === Why Cruise Ships Keep Getting Bigger & Better??? Why are today’s cruise ships becoming so gigantic? It’s not just Royal Caribbean leading the charge with mega-ships—even lines once defined by “small ship luxury,” like Silversea and Seabourn, are quietly joining the size race. Holland America, which once promoted itself as a mid-sized line with fewer than 1,500 guests, is now launching vessels that carry over 2,600 passengers. So what’s really driving this wave of massive shipbuilding—and is it truly the inevitable future of ocean travel? Let’s find out on today of episode on Cruise Now: Why Cruise Ships Keep Getting Bigger & Better??? Who could forget last year’s viral image of a cruise ship’s stern that looked like an oversized birthday cake? Its decks were flashy and cartoonish, with spiraling waterslides, turquoise pools, and neon decorations that left many people wondering how it could even float. And if you thought the noise and excitement back in January 2024 — when Royal Caribbean launched the world’s largest cruise ship, the 1,196-foot-long Icon of the Seas — would be the last time you heard about mega cruise ships for a while, think again. Why Cruise Ships Keep Getting Bigger & Better??? The phrase “bigger is better” is still the mantra of the world’s largest cruise lines — including Royal Caribbean, MSC Cruises, Carnival Cruise Line, and Norwegian Cruise Line — as one massive vessel after another rolls out of the shipyards and into the oceans. Just this year, we’re seeing a wave of ships that are not only enormous in real-world scale but, in many cases, even larger than their sister ships that came before them.