>>46491338I wanna break this down further so people understand why a secondary market is important. It helps the gamblers, pack openers, feel like they "win" more often.
Let's imagine the scenario where there is no secondary market to speak of. There's two outcomes when a person breaks open a back:
You pull something you want/need = You're happy = you're more likely to buy more packs
You pull something you don't want/need = you're disappointed = you're less likely to buy more packs
Vs if there is a healthy secondary market(no, what's going on right now is not a healthy secondary market shut the fuck up):
You pull a card you need/want = you're happy = more likely to buy packs
You pull a card you don't need/want but it's worth a good amount of moeny = you're happy = you're more likely to buy more packs
You pull an expensive card you didn't really want, but do need = you're happy = more likely to buy more packs
You don't pull a card you want/need and you pull nothing worth any money = you're disappointed = you're less likely to buy more packs
The secondary market makes a 50/50 chance of the customer leaving happy turn into a 3/4 chance the customer leaves happy.
>>46491344Are you not paying attention to the topic we are talking about?