Marlon Hestetune wrote: As a person who follows almost all the auctions on here and on eBay for tokens and a fair amount of other stuff, I am curious why there seems to be such a concern on these forums with auction sniping.
It has been around as long as auctions have existed, and honestly it adds some of the excitement to an auction.
Do I like to be sniped? No, who does, but I'm never mad at the person, just at myself.
Do I want to get a great deal on an auction? Sure, that's why I am throwing the opening 1 cent bid out there on the RoSP
Do I like losing an auction because I wasn't around for the end? Mo, but if it was that important to me, I would have made arrangements, or bid higher to protect myself
I say, set your auctions if you want. Call out an end time and be done. We as bidders can then decide how valuable or important it is too us.
If you are worried someone's feelings might get hurt, well don't be if you are fair and consistent, or open a store. If you do too much to limit urgency and excitement, you won't ever get those magical auctions that go way over what they are worth.
I broadly agree, but a few things:
1. For auctions where the seller is extending things a day or so if late bits come in, the sellers aren't putting in automatic auction extenders to protect buyers feeling - they are doing it to get the highest price.
I don't particularly like those sorts of auctions, because I want to know when the auction ends.
2. There is an enormous difference between auctions where the price is determined by the second highest bid, and the highest bid.
For the first kind of auctions where the price is determined by the next highest bid sniping is somewhat harmless and silly (it offers some slight advantages, mostly psychological).
For some reason there has been a rash of the second sort of auction recently where:
* The price is determined by the high bid
* The amount of the high bid is publicized
* The end conditions and update frequency are nebulous
Here sniping is the only rational strategy - otherwise you either pay to much, or you ensure that you'll get outbid by the minimum increment - neither outcome is appealing.
For myself I've resolved to no longer take part in forum auctions of the second sort - as it feels more like me providing an offer to buy and then the seller shopping that offer around to see if they can get a better price before getting back to me than an "auction."
PSA to auctioneers, here are reasonable auction types:
1. Live auction, where you announce an escalating price and people signify their interest (not practical on a forum).
2. Price determined by the second highest bid, current price announced, fixed or moving end date based on bids being topped.
3. Price determined by the highest bid, bids are sealed / private. A few variations here, like each party gets only one bid, or the auctioneer announces _who_ has the winning bid, but not the bid amount.
Here is not a reasonable auction type:
1. Price determined by maximum bid, maximum bid amount announced, end criteria murky or unrealistic (for example a promise to end at a certain time but then being unable to keep the auction price updated due to a flurry of late bids).