Silver Supporter
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I've been looking at a couple of different firearms on Gunbroker, probably against my better judgement
It's interesting watching and trying to analyze people through their bidding activity on guns I am interested in.
I have a maximum bid amount, a price that won't give me buyers remorse like the Colt .22 Diamondback I just had to have. When I spot something I would like I save it in my watch list and then look for others available and take into account taxes, cc fees, shipping etc and work out my max bid based on that. One firearm I was bidding on, and stopped when it got to my max, went for more than others that had a buy it now option when you factor in the above, which got me thinking about peoples mindset.
Looking at bid history on a gun I'm bidding on you see multiple bids from one person trying to get in front of the highest bidder, then it's a back and forth until one wins out. Sort of like a game of chicken where the winner gets a shot of endorphins and the loser kicks the cat, metaphorically speaking.
I got the bidding bug when ebay was a real auction site and not another online buy it now store, where watching the item time count down, finger hovering over the keyboard with your next bid loaded just in case someone else had their beady eyes glued to the screen gave you a thrill that the item you "needed" was seconds away from being yours and damn the expense!
I'm sure psychologists would recognize that human trait and be able to put a name to it.
Now back to watching and deciding on that revolver I'm trying to justify owning.
I have a maximum bid amount, a price that won't give me buyers remorse like the Colt .22 Diamondback I just had to have. When I spot something I would like I save it in my watch list and then look for others available and take into account taxes, cc fees, shipping etc and work out my max bid based on that. One firearm I was bidding on, and stopped when it got to my max, went for more than others that had a buy it now option when you factor in the above, which got me thinking about peoples mindset.
Looking at bid history on a gun I'm bidding on you see multiple bids from one person trying to get in front of the highest bidder, then it's a back and forth until one wins out. Sort of like a game of chicken where the winner gets a shot of endorphins and the loser kicks the cat, metaphorically speaking.
I got the bidding bug when ebay was a real auction site and not another online buy it now store, where watching the item time count down, finger hovering over the keyboard with your next bid loaded just in case someone else had their beady eyes glued to the screen gave you a thrill that the item you "needed" was seconds away from being yours and damn the expense!
I'm sure psychologists would recognize that human trait and be able to put a name to it.
Now back to watching and deciding on that revolver I'm trying to justify owning.