Overall Score
| BERLITZ'S RATING |
| |
Possible |
Achieved |
| |
| Ship |
500 |
426 |
| Accommodation |
200 |
165 |
| Food |
400 |
219 |
| Service |
400 |
269 |
| Entertainment |
100 |
85 |
| Cruise |
400 |
287 |
| |
How this score is created
Carnival Triumph is the 14th new ship for this very successful cruise line. It is unable to transit the Panama Canal due to its size. The ship, whose bows are extremely short, has the distinctive, large, swept-back wing-tipped funnel that is the trademark of Carnival Cruise Lines, in the company colors of red, white and blue.
This is quite a stunning ship, built to impress at every turn, and has the most balanced profile of all the ships in the Carnival Cruise Lines fleet. Amidships on the open deck is the longest water slide at sea (200ft /60 meters in length, it travels from just aft of the ship’s mast), as well as tiered sunbathing decks positioned between two small swimming pools and several hot tubs. The Lido Deck space is more expansive than aboard earlier sister ship Carnival Destiny (the swim-up bar has been eliminated), and the pool is larger, as it is aboard close sister Carnival Victory.
The ship is a fantasy land for the senses (though nowhere near as glitzy as the “Fantasy”-class ships). The layout is logical, so finding your way around is fairly simple. There are three decks full of lounges, 10 bars and lots of rooms to play in. Like her smaller (though still large) predecessors, this ship has a doublewide indoor promenade, and a deck-high, glass-domed rotunda atrium lobby. For those that like to gamble, the Club Monaco is certainly a large (and noisy) casino. There are more than 320 slot machines.
An additional feature that this ship has which the Fantasy-class ships do not have is the Flagship bar, located in the Rotunda (atrium), which faces forward to the glass-walled lifts. A sports bar (Olympic Bar) has tables that feature sports memorabilia.
Children are provided with good facilities, including their own two-level Children’s Club (including an outdoor pool), and are well cared for with “Camp Carnival”, the line’s extensive children’s program.
From the viewpoint of safety, passengers can embark directly into the lifeboats from their secured position without having to wait for them to be lowered, thus saving time in the event of a real emergency. Well done.
The terraced pool deck is really cluttered, and there are no cushioned pads for the deck chairs. Although the outdoor deck space has been improved, there is still much crowding when the ship is full and at sea. Getting away from people and noise is difficult. The Photo Gallery becomes extremely congested when photos are on display.
Berlitz Guide © Apa Publishing 2008