Here's the catch—when everyone's got money, luxury loses its edge. Fancy goods flood the market everywhere now. Too many countries crafting premium wine, luxury watches, high-end fashion. The question becomes: is that top-tier Bordeaux actually leagues ahead of alternatives, or has the gap just narrowed? When scarcity vanishes, so does the premium. Ultra-wealthy consumers face an interesting paradox—abundance of options destroys the exclusivity that made those goods desirable in the first place.

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SlowLearnerWangvip
· 01-23 05:50
Oh wow, you're right. It just now dawned on me... Luxury goods are everywhere now, so what's the point of being so luxurious haha
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wrekt_but_learningvip
· 01-23 05:50
NGL, that's why the real wealthy are now starting to collect those niche items, doing the opposite.
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RamenDeFiSurvivorvip
· 01-23 05:48
NGL, this is the common problem in Web3—having too many tokens makes them less desirable...
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FrogInTheWellvip
· 01-23 05:45
Basically, it's all about fierce competition. Luxury goods are also fiercely competitive, with no real sense of scarcity, and they're just expensive as hell.
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CryptoFortuneTellervip
· 01-23 05:36
ngl That's why real wealthy people are now into virtual assets; physical luxury goods have long become mainstream.
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