Capcholo wrote on 2023-07-25, 07:04:
Overpriced to which country? It is overpriced for Romania, not overpriced for Germany. It is overpriced for Guatemala, not overpriced for the US. People who shop for retro on Ebay regularly know this. It's not necessarily overpriced, just sought after. One part of the World can't buy a $200 CPU and constantly complains about high prices, the other finds it to be a decent price and
$200 for a decade old CPU is overpriced everywhere on the world. That's not collector price, neither retro enthusiast price. That's speculator's price.
Capcholo wrote on 2023-07-25, 07:04:
The point of this entire wall of text was to determine the reasoning behind this sentence, since prices of 10 year old processors are similar to prices of 40 year old processors. Shouldn't they be much lower since people ignore them completely? Are these people all buying Core 2 Duo E7600 or Celeron 320 processors to make builds? I believe in just the opposite.
That's where utility comes in. If you want to build a DOS PC or a Windows 98 PC you can't really go past Socket478.
If you account for issues software have with much more modern hardware than they were made for, you have to go further back.
That drives the VALUE of those much older CPUs. Anything above that value is speculative PRICE.
Capcholo wrote on 2023-07-25, 07:04:
How many people make builds who buy these processors and how many of them put them in a box? Must be like 1:10. That 1 blames the other 9 for high prices, high prices meaning $10-20. But that one person keeps forgetting that searching for specific parts is always more difficult than buying anything that is of that era.
There are a third group we haven't mention yet. The hoarders. I define them by having an interest in having an interest in retro, rather than plainly having an interest in retro. They pile up a lot of stuff that is accessible with the hopes that one day they'll do something with them. And that never comes.
Capcholo wrote on 2023-07-25, 07:04:
People want a Voodoo 4 4500 then they blame collectors for high prices. But if you want THAT specific part and that part alone, won't that make you a collector as well? Collector of specific hardware. So what really drives up prices? Supply and demand?
Sometimes demand drives the price more than supply. Aside of being a collectors (nowdays more like speculator's) item, it's a very good card for a very specific tasks. Offering decent performance up-to games released in 2000 with Glide support in period correct resolutions.
Capcholo wrote on 2023-07-25, 07:04:
People who use them want a specific part, collectors want a specific part, people who upgrade want a specific part, all doing the same thing. Sellers notice the interest going up and adjust their prices accordingly.
Some do, some don't. Some speculate the price will rise and list their stuff way above their value, some see parts are listed at those high prices and they match them. The value is the price where legit transactions happen. Having listings for a specific part for $1000 and nothing bleow doesn't mean that specific part worth $1000 to anyone.
Capcholo wrote on 2023-07-25, 07:04:
So collectors are also the reason sellers take hardware OUT of the trash instead of leaving it all to get recycled.
Yes, collectors are the reason it's more profitable to sell 30 years old sound cards for more than the price of gold you can scrap from them, but collectors aren't the reason some ask for the price of their weight in gold.
Circling back to complaining about prices. Complaining that old hardware isn't free is dumb, but complaining speculators making certain hardware unobtainable is legit. GUS is only an okay sound card with some games specifically designed for it. That doesn't make it worth $500, but speculators pushed its price that high.