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‘Hotel hell’: San Diego Comic-Con’s new Ticketmaster-style reservations system has attendees asking, ‘What were they thinking?’

Getty Images Camping out overnight to secure a seat in Hall H has become one of San Diego Comic-Con’s time-honored traditions for die-hard fans. This year, I might have to join them — not for the panel, but because I’ve got nowhere else to sleep after a disastrous new hotel booking system was implemented.

In years past, convention-goers have entered a lottery system, ranking their top-choice hotels, and eventually receiving an assignment. (Booking through SDCC secures locked-in rates, typically between $200 and $400 per night, while prices when booking direct can soar into the thousands.)

It was messy, disorganized and always a bit of a crapshoot — at previous outlets, we’d ask dozens of our colleagues to request rooms, in hopes that we’d be granted just one or two from the lot.

San Diego Comic-Con draws thousands to the Gaslamp District every year for presentations featuring A-list celebs. Getty Images for Disney After years of complaints, SDCC unveiled a new system for its 2026 edition, transitioning to live booking in real time. “This change provides a faster, more transparent, and more empowering experience for participants,” the SDCC site reads.

It’s baffling to think that the “improved” process was akin to the notoriously horrific experience of waiting in a Ticketmaster queue. It was quickly deemed “hotelpocalypse” by fans, and it lived up to that moniker. I had an easier time securing tickets for Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour.

I entered the waiting room at 8:34a.m. ahead of the 9a.m. queue assignments. In the queue, I stared at a slow-moving image of the ‘Con’s toucan mascot on a progress bar for an hour and 54 minutes, before finally being let in to purchase…nothing!

Of the 62 participating hotels, 51 were sold out, while the remaining 11 options (most of which were over 5 miles away from the convention center) were unavailable for Friday evening — preventing me from booking the needed Wednesday to Sunday stay.

San Diego Comic-Con’s new hotel system is akin to a Ticketmaster queue. Getty Images “It feels like they tried to make it an equal playing field, but they actually just made it equally miserable,” one similarly scorned journalist told me.

Another trade reporter called the experience “a f—king nightmare,” adding that he was let in after an hour and 40 minutes. While entering his credit card information, the lodging he was booking suddenly became unavailable, forcing him to begin the process again. “What were they thinking?”

For what it’s worth, not everyone shared in my misery – some (namely the ones who actually scored rooms) are hailing the new system as simpler. My sleeping bag and I aren’t convinced.

San Diego Comic-Con did not respond to Page Six Hollywood’s request for comment.

Read original at New York Post

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