this post was submitted on 17 May 2025
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I will post this here too, since you double posted.
This thought process is going kill small businesses that cannot absorb tariffs. If Walmart sell an item that I also sell in my shop and Walmart keeps the item the same price it was before the tariffs, but I have to raise my price, where do you think people are going to buy?
Let us use Pokemon cards as an example. Packs are about $4.49. Typical keystone markup dictates we are paying ~$2.25 per pack (I wish I was paying that little for pokemon). But now there is a tariff of 50% and the manufacturer wants to pass that cost along to the consumer, so I am now paying $3.37 a pack, so if I want to keystone I need to sell at $6.75, while Walmart absorbs the cost and sells at $4.49. That does not look like too much.
But what about a $150 board game? I am now selling it at $225 and Walmart still has it at $150, I look like the greedy bastard trying to milk my customers.
Whoa whoa whoa whoa, you had me until this gem.
What the ever living fuck warrants a $150 price on a BOARD game?
That fucker better have gold pressed latinum as its currency and come with a few bars along with Trinity glass d20s.
/Stomps off in old man nerd fashion
What's the last time you've bought a board game? A mix of the pandemic, more people in the hobby and a few big examples becoming so popular they defined the new norm on pricing, means $150 for a board game is extremely common. It's not even the most expensive example.
What are some games that are worth it are this price?