I'm looking over a new pair of shoes I recently bought. My feet hurt after walking a few miles in them, so I inspected the insole area, and it was the cheapest 5mm foam imaginable with no other structural support. Below that is basically just the rubber sole. This shit cost $100.

This isn't my first rodeo with overpriced, shitty shoes, so I always have a set of superfeet inserts on standby. Huge improvement, but fuck, why does everything have to be a rip off? Those inserts are $50 for some nicer foam and a simple sliver of molded plastic.

This brings me to the thread title: When was the last time you felt like you got your money's worth for an item?

  • D61 [any]
    ·
    edit-2
    8 months ago

    Etnies sneakers, definitely. Bought a pair ... shit.. its got to be over 5 years now and they're still in serviceable shape for something that I would wear for 10+ hours doing receiving/stocking work. Spent something like 50$ US for them. Bought another pair last year for about the same price, hope they last at least half a long.

    Currently thinking that buying a cast iron tortilla press last December as my "christmas" present to the house will probably be another one of my "good value purchases". Been making soft tacos once a week for the last month or so. I think I finally found the cast iron model I had been eyeballing for years, priced around 50$ after shipping.

    • coeliacmccarthy [he/him]
      ·
      8 months ago

      cast iron is often a good value purchase, treat it good and it'll serve you the rest of your life

      • D61 [any]
        ·
        8 months ago

        Never being a skater but having heard of a few brands... found some at Walmart or Payless Shoe Source and they all were garbage.

        I gambled years ago at buying blind from an online vendor and eventually found the Etnies website. One of the few times that I actually "won" when gambling on something.