I went to Epcot this past Sunday. What I really found interesting was not just the sheer number of people on scooters / in wheelchairs - there were a lot - but just how few of them were hugely fat people. I would say at most 5-10% of the people in wheelchairs were people that if I saw them walking I would have been shocked they did not need assistance (or that I would say that looking at them, the disability that put them in a chair was how fat they were). Probably a quarter of the people were using a mobility device due to advanced age. The rest - over half - I had absolutely no idea why they were in a chair/on a scooter. They were maybe in their 50's at most and of the remainder, the majority were probably in their 30's or 40's. They were also pretty much all under 250, and most under 200/not more than what the average person would describe as "overweight (as opposed to "fat"). I saw few who I would guess were in the 300; those needing assistance were either high 400s+ or sub 250. And no, I did not take pics - my wife was with me and would have killed me if I took a pic of the very few women who left me weak in the knees. (Frankly, there was really only one who would rate as huge on my scale, and it was hard to gauge how big she was as she wore a frilly tuile skirt that made it hard to tell exactly how much of her width was her vs skirt or how huge her thighs were, though she was definitely 500+, just not sure how "+".)