- Sep 6, 2012
- 26
- 11
It all comes down to supply and demand. The alleged 400, (or whatever limit a special edition sneaker has) no where meets the demand, which causes mayhem. If the number produced was expanded to meet demand, there would be a lot more content customers, no insane resale prices, and Nike/etc would bring in more profit, simply due to quantity sold. There's a question of whether the masses would pay 200+ for a non-limited shoe, but most would probably pay close. Maybe prices are even reduced across the board, even better. The downside: the art of the hunt is diminished. You stroll in and out of a store, pay, leave, no big deal. With sufficient cash in hand, absolutely anyone can do the same. Your just buying a shoe, no longer the rare, prized pair of a collection. All the time and work one must put in searching/researching/waiting is null, as is the wildcard- luck. And thus, too gone, is the gratification of succeeding at the end of the journey. The mystique is lost...would you then still be hooked?
All just a hypothetical of course, never gonna happen...
All just a hypothetical of course, never gonna happen...