this post was submitted on 13 Jul 2023
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What you’re calling “sucker tax” is also just having different values. Someone buying reddit coins is trading money for something else they value more than the money.
Like this cheeseburger isn’t gonna make me any money so it’s a bad investment, but I want the cheeseburger for non-monetary reasons so I’m trading my money for it.
What I'm calling "sucker tax" is only the difference between the actual price versus the "eyeballed" price of something inside one's head, because the person didn't bother to run the maths. This is an actual thing when fake currencies are involved.
For example. A platinum award should cost 4~7 dollars. If we told this to two different users, who just gave someone a platinum award:
Alice is paying the sucker tax; Bob isn't. Bob's case is a lot more like your cheeseburger example.
This is relevant here because the sucker tax usually requires some in-game "fake" currency, like Reddit coins, to mask the real cost of the action. It's a piece of user-hostile design that you see often in games full of microtransactions.
Ah I see the difference now. The intermediary currency is where the strangeness comes in. And conversion to the intermediary currency is always nonlinear. You get bulk pricing on bigger conversions.