musicgurl333 wrote: (Snip)
Eh, I’m still not sure I agree. Without knowing otherwise, I’ve been working on the assumption that the rarities are now pretty evenly spaced out. This may not be true, but since we don’t know, but that’s the best we’ve got to work with. So doing 2:1 within rarities and 3:1 between feels
1. Overly complicated and
2. A bit arbitrary. Why do we have any reason to believe the gap between rarities is bigger than a single step within the same rarity?
As far as rares being worth more and uncommons being worth less, that’s still the case with a consistent 2:1 ratio. Before, using the 2:1 ratio, rares were worth 2 uncommons (not something I agreed with, but it was what a LOT of people used). Now, a rare would be worth 6 uncommons using the “2:1 rule”. That’s still 3 times more. That seems pretty reasonable to me.
Interesting to hear everyone’s opinions on how to value trading going forward! I’ll be really interested to see what the community settles on!

(Realized after typing this that some of it might sound condescending? I don't mean it to come off that way! Just spewing my opinions on the trading system and how it works between people. Not meaning to be rude. ^^; Read it in a more quizzical/introspective or lighthearted way. )
I don't think the 3:1 thing between rarities is necessarily value-based, it feels more demand-based to me. "Rare" always feels better than "Uncommon", in people's minds, and people never want to trade their Rares down to Uncommons. I don't know if the "Extremely" before the "Uncommon" is going to change that mentality very much. Feels the same for commons to uncommons, just less-so because people care about them less.
Everyone feels so focused on "Uncommons are worth less now" and less on the "Extremely Uncommons have replaced where regular Uncommons were on the food chain, they're not the same Uncommons as they were before." Regular Uncommons are likely, on average,
less Uncommon than they were before. See the charts on
this thread. Some commons likely became uncommon in the switch over, meaning some of the uncommons today are worth more than they were before the switch. You get more out of some pets, and less out of others. Kind of how the rarity overhaul works, imo.
Even if 2:1 is more realistic in terms of their actual
value, I think 3:1 for Extremely Uncommons to Rares is going to be the 'standard', because people will always want more out of their rares, while not wanting to offer more to other people for theirs. I try to speak from both sides at once- trading away rares, and trying to trade up
to Rares. Personally, I wouldn't trade away (most) rares for two EU, unless an EU has particular demand that balances it out, or the rare is low-demand (like a rare rat for 2 EU dogs) but I would for three. You might think differently. And that's how trading works.
The way this works is cyclical, trade someone a rare for 3 EUs. Trade someone 2 of those EUs for a rare, repeat. Once you've traded 2 rares for 3 EUs each, you have enough for 3 Rares from someone who values them at 2:1.
You gain value over time because different people value pets differently and that's how the entire trading system works when you're trying to gain value. Some people are willing to lose more value than others for certain pets or gambles, take the people trading 09 rares for tokens during token season, for example. Token demand fluctuates throughout the events and you have to buy/sell them for C$ or older rares at the right time to make a "profit". If you start with a '10 Rare (~25 C$ value? thats what it used to be, idk anymore cause rarity overhaul), trade it for 10 tokens, and sell those tokens at 5 C$ each, (token market goes crazy at the beginning of the events) you've made a huge profit. Buy another '10 rare or two for 25-ish C$ each from a player who's selling them and do it again. Then you've quadrupled your initial value. If you're a new player who doesn't have a '10 rare, guess what? You can still sell your tokens to the people who buy them for 5 C$ each, instead of trading them to the '10 rare person. Or if you don't value C$ like that or don't wanna deal with the hassle of trading it off, then
do trade them to the '10 rare person.
This is really divisive, since there are people who say "3 EUs are worth 1 Rare" and people who say, "Well, an EU is
basically a rare already." That's how I felt about 09 Uncommons. I was like, "Well, 09 Uncommons are
basically 09 rares, just give them until the next rarity update and they'll be up there.". So it might be harder to get someone to trade 3 EUs for 1 Rare than others. If someone wants to 1:1 Swap an EU for a Rare, that's how losing and gaining value works with supply and demand. If you want something bad enough, you're willing to trade more value for it, even if the rarity tag doesn't match the price. For a little while, I was trading 09 rares for these
lil goat guys, 'cause I wanted them that bad. Are they worth 09 rares? No.
Are they
to me? Yes.
Does what anybody else values them at matter to me, at all? Not really. Unless they value them at more than 1 09 rare, then I might be willing to let go of one of them. :p
On an vaguely related note: I think it was a bad move to make EUs the same color that regular Rares were before. Should've shifted the color a little so people won't go, "Omg, EU's are just retextured Rares." That was my first association with it, because it had the Rare color, but then I realized that they
weren't rare after reading the text and it left me confused. I was thinking, "Are they rare or not?"
In the end, I doubt there will ever be a majority agreed upon "value" to rarity tags. I think the 2:1/3:1 split is always going to be here, because without it, nobody would lose or gain value from their pets, all swaps would be even to all parties and we wouldn't need the Fair Trade Thread. Even if I value EUs at 3:1 for Rares, of course I'm going to send trades to people with 2:1, because I want more value from my pets. It's up to the other person if they think that my pets are the value that I am offering for, not me. If they decline, that's just how trades go. If everyone is happy with the trade at the end, does it matter what the 'true' value is?