Merlin builds tallest fastest coaster in the UK in 2024. Said coaster is modern, unique and truly thrilling. Merlin gets called a "travesty."
Paultons build a small Eurofighter (lol, what is this, 2009?!) and gets...praised for it?
Now, I understand there's a bit of a David and Goliath perpective here. Where Merlin is viewed as the big corporate giant, and Paultons is the plucky lil independent park. I understand why people want to root for Paultons.
But if this coaster were being built at any other UK park, I feel the reaction would be far more (rightfully) critical.
It's just a bit of a wasted opportunity, isn't it? You have the rare chance to build a big new coaster and you purchase a model so un-remarkably common that it can be found in Southend, ffs.
From a marketing perspective, a single rail coaster would have been far more unique and eye-catching.
I would also argue that a Hot Racer is far less intimidating to kids than a Eurofighter beyond vertical drop is. Plus, Hot Racers look like toys, making the inversion aspect way more approachable.
A single rail would have made Paultons stand out. A Eurofighter doesn't.
But then, Paultons has never really been about standing out in the first place. I'm not going to knock Paultons for playing it so painfully safe, because that's what this park always does and it works for them. Can't mock the formula.
There is a bit of David Vs Goliath here but I kind of disagree with everything you said

I'm sorry.
If this ride was built at any other UK park it would have been criticised? It's all about context. If it had been built at Alton then sure maybe, but it basically has been built at 3 other UK parks and I don't remember them being massively criticised? If this had been built at Chessington instead of Paultons and it had had the same attention to detail with the themeing my reaction would have been the same. But we all know Merlin wouldn't spend the money on the themeing.
As for Hyperia... Well now you've got me started
If we want to talk about wasted opportunities then Hyperia is the king. While Merlin did build the tallest fastest coaster in the UK they also built the shortest hyper coaster on the planet in terms of length Vs height and removed one of the better themed areas at thorpe for a gold temu watch presentation box.
Hyperia is the biggest wasted opportunity I think I've ever seen in a UK park.
Sure it's a decent ride (although personally it's not even the best ride in the park for me) but i haven't been back since my first rides and I'd much rather spend the little extra time it takes to ride Kondaa, a much better ride in every single department.
Merlin are a travesty. They cut the budget until they had a sub standard hypercoaster that just took the record and themed it to gold.
/Rant over.
I can see why people wanted a single rail but it was never going to happen at a park aimed so much at families that doesn't have a proper thrill coaster yet.
The big thing about single rail coasters is you ride alone and exposed, an awful awful ride type for a ride that presumably the park wants little'uns to be their first thrill coaster. Where kids will want to ride with parents to hold their hand when they go upside down for the first time.
Single rails are very much the next step up and Walibi Rhone Alps a park also mainly aimed at kids seemingly understood this they built theirs after they had built Mystic. A much better grading of steps up.
There is something else to take into account here as to why it's not some of the other options and it's a reason we enthusiasts very rarely think about because it's mostly behind the scenes.
There were other possibly better options, one of those Intamin launched juniors they've been pushing perhaps, or a big dipper, but with how full up Intamin's and Macks books are right now we certainly wouldn't be getting anything this year. (If the 2027 ride is indeed a Mack Water Coaster, I highly suspect the reason it's opening a year later than the rest of the area would be because of how few slots Mack have for rides at the moment, I know for a fact one major coaster in the US that was planned to be a Mack but they didn't have the manufacturing capacity to get the ride built the year the park wanted and now it's been built by someone else)