Each Ship is Designed with a Style in Mind
Source: Our analysis of the creator's lived experience, based on what they said in this video.
Creator's Key Takeaways
we spent one week on a Royal Caribbean ship which is a medium range happy ship you know and then another week on this more elegant Celebrity Cruise
this boat has an whereas the other play would have big colorful playgrounds for kids and everything and Disney characters here you got real grass real grass on the ship
you've got people really just uh having a more sedate time really subdued which really would appeal to a different Market segment
I have a tough time saying which one's better certainly nothing wrong with this one if you want to hang out and enjoy uh some melow music poolside
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Port Highlights
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 methodologyYouTube Video Description↓
Each cruise line has its fans and caters to a different market segment. Shorter trips have a younger clientele while longer ones are filled with retirees. But each ship seems designed to fit a certain style of passenger too. Our first cruise (Royal Caribbean) was glitzy, colorful, and youthful. Its slogan was "We are the nation of why not?" This second cruise (Celebrity) was more elegant. I wouldn't say stodgy at all. In fact, while it had a more dressy, affluent, and mature demographic, there was plenty of action. But from this video (which you can compare to a similar one on the other ship I shared last week) you can see the stress was on elegance and quality design. ... In your experience, which cruise line offers the most enjoyable ambiance and clientele?