Since we're already a couple of days removed from the show, I'll condense my thoughts a little bit. First of all, this will help set the stage for some of my other comments in the review - this is my third show of the tour (along with Chicago and Indianapolis) and my 14th Journey show overall (age 24). Having said that, this show probably falls right in the middle of the shows I've seen, both on this tour and all time for two main reasons, and both have been discussed on here at length:
1) The Setlist
I agree completely with Gideon when he said that When You Love A Woman is a strange song to be in the third slot, and Faithfully at number five after City Of Hope is bizarre as well. All of Journey's songs on the night were performed really, really well, as always. Arnel sounded in top form, and the rest of the band was solid. But I could not get past the overall feeling of a car starting and stopping when you're trying to drive it somewhere. They would open up with Separate Ways and the crowd goes nuts. Then it's Ask The Lonely, which in reality not everybody knows. But then you go into When You Love A Woman and slow everything way down, before City Of Hope and then Faithfully. It's a strange way to start a show after Separate Ways. Throughout the rest of the show you mostly alternate faster, slower, faster, slower, and it subdues a crowd that Foreigner had going nuts. I won't say that Foreigner was better than Journey. Because they aren't. But for most people, it seems like they have a more engaging set.
City Of Hope went over decently well, but Edge Of The Moment was a complete dud. That song did nothing any of the three shows I saw on this tour. Why not swap it out for another Eclipse song? What do you have to lose? There is no excuse for not playing Anything Is Possible - a SINGLE - and doing EOTM instead.
I enjoyed seeing La Do Da, and Lovin', Touchin', Squeezin' right after DSB in the encore slot came across really well. Maybe because they didn't do that extended blues intro and went right into it after DSB ended, and maybe it's because I didn't see it in Chicago or Indy. But the crowd responded incredibly well, and it was an enjoyable way to end the show.
As always, the final four or five songs were one knockout punch after another, which always seems to be the strength of Journey's set. If they just fine-tuned the way they did the first half of the show, it would just SEEM like a better show. I described it to my girlfriend as Foreigner has a more even-keeled show at a high level throughout, but Journey's is more of a rollercoaster - Journey's highs will ALWAYS be higher than Foreigner (or another opening band), but their low spots drag it down a little bit.
And again, I am NOT talking about the performances of the songs here. Journey will outperform almost any band you put them up against. I am just talking about the overall FEEL of the show from an audience standpoint.
2) The Sound
Let me preface this by saying I am not a musician, and I don't know much a damn thing about the technical aspects of putting on a rock show. But when your headliner comes out and sounds totally different (for the worse) than the other two bands, then there is something not quite right. I will say that I don't think it's as much of an issue as some people do. But there were points in the show where my ears actually hurt a little bit. And I'm 24 years old, and I go to plenty of concerts every year. There is just something about the sound on this tour that makes parts of the show hard to listen to.
I can't put my finger on it and won't try to explain it, but it has not been like this on previous tours. I've seen multiple shows from all different bands at all of these venues, and Journey does NOT sound good on this tour. Chalk it up to the new sound guy, new equipment, whatever. But something isn't working. I overheard some people after the show who said they had to leave early because they "couldn't take it anymore" and that Journey's sound "wore them out." Not good, guys.
All in all, it was still a really fun show. You can hate the triple-band bills all you want, but they work. People were packed to the rafters for this show, and they were into it. Night Ranger and Foreigner are both outstanding, and Journey was solid as is expected. Journey's lights/videos/lasers were incredible and FINALLY fitting of a headliner.
Now that my shows on this leg of the tour have concluded, I would rank the overall enjoyment of each of the tours I've seen the band on as follows (not that people ranking their shows means anything

)
1) Revelation Tour
2) Def Leppard Tour
3) Eclipse Tour
4) Generations Tour
5) Classic Rock's Main Event Tour
There's no doubt that Journey should, and will continue to, headline tours until they decide to retire. But if they think that everything came up roses on the first leg of the Eclipse Tour and just mail it in until the next leg without fixing anything, then they would be making a terrible mistake.