zecg,
@zecg@lemmy.world avatar

Randonneuring.

demesisx,
@demesisx@lemmy.world avatar

Randonneuring

long-distance unsupported endurance cycling. This style of riding is non-competitive in nature, and self-sufficiency is paramount. When riders participate in randonneuring events, they are part of a long tradition that goes back to the beginning of the sport of cycling in France and Italy.

RagnarokOnline,

Thank you for this

CoolSouthpaw,

Mechanical watches. I guess I grew up with quartz watches and only learned about the existence of automatic watches a few years ago. Marvelous things they are, and of course, high watch brands like Rolex, etc, are tens of thousands of dollars, with certain pieces going for millions. Insane.

randon31415,

Apparently fur-suits are ~$15,000. You could buy a car for that and still have enough money left over to drive for a year.

Patchwork,
@Patchwork@lemmy.world avatar

I just ordered a second one a couple months from a top-tier maker and it was pretty expensive.

The first one I got back in 2008 was $1450. I don’t think it’s possible to get a descent one for under $3000 these days

thawed_caveman,

That’s about the most expensive fursuit you can buy, it goes much lower than that. Still low car money though

jastyty,

Modular synths, eurorack is where you find the most accessible modules than the other formats. Sometimes you go and spend 600€ in a module without batting an eye.

Also you have to count the case, patch cables, etc.

It gets expensive quickly if you can’t fight the GAS (gear acquisition syndrome)

Also it is a musical instrument so you need to practice many hours to play it affectively.

It is really cool, I do enjoy myself playing with my modular, but would love to have more time to spend with it.

Obi,
@Obi@sopuli.xyz avatar

From what I’ve seen, modulars tend to attract people that love to tinker but aren’t necessarily very musical. They spend 30k and years on their setup but when they actually play something it’s just space soup. There are exceptions of course, some respected producers do use them, but that’s just my casual observation.

spindrift,
@spindrift@lemmy.world avatar

Absolutely. I love audio design, synthesis and making music, but I have rarely released anything. It took a long time for me to realize and accept that I do this for my own entertainment and not to be a successful musician. Its just a hobby.

Obi,
@Obi@sopuli.xyz avatar

And there’s nothing wrong with that! Music has also always remained something I did for fun, I have a different creative field as my day job and I don’t want to do the same with music nu-hu.

figaro,

Racing drones.

It turns out when you crash your $500 drone into a brick wall at 50mph, shit breaks and you get to spend more money if you want to fly it into another wall

Obi,
@Obi@sopuli.xyz avatar

This has both, really. People also have no idea how hard it is to pilot the quick, expensive little bastards. You’re gonna spend a good chunk of time in the simulator before you can do anything with a real one. But hey, at least you can fix them, unlike DJI stuff where at the smallest little thing it’s bricked.

figaro,

Oh definitely. DJI is good for photography and some types of video, but that’s about it. I’d avoid DJI for just about everything else.

Lianodel,

Camping. Whether it’s at a campsite, where a family might spend tens or hundreds of thousands on an RV and all the gadgets in it, or deep in the woods, where an ultralight backpacker might spend thousands of dollars upgrading perfectly good gear they already had because it could save a few ounces.

To be clear, camping is actually really accessible, and few people go THAT extreme with it. Just… no matter what budget you set for it, there are ways to spend it. :P

SocialMediaRefugee,

Amateur astronomy, you can start with a modest Dobsonian then it get can very expensive very fast and you need to understand celestial coordinates, ccds, optics and such.

DoWotJohn,

Aquariums. It’s shocking how much money you can spend on fish and how easily you can kill them all if you don’t know what you’re doing. Even worse, if you’re really into it, you can’t have just one aquarium.

ki77erb, (edited )

We had one for years. I cleaned it one day just like I had done a hundred times before. The next day the water turned cloudy and all our fish died. Sold the tank and cabinet a few days later. Having an aquarium is a 2nd job.

Kage520,

We had all the fish die in our aquarium once when I was a kid. Was random and unexplainable at first. Then I found out someone had run a powerful ozone machine to combat mold in the house and no one thought about the fish tank.

Obi,
@Obi@sopuli.xyz avatar

As much as I’d love to have a nice live coral aquarium to look at in my living room, fuck everything about taking care of one.

Tathas,

I don’t think the average Joe would know how expensive Warhammer 40k or model trains are.

southernbeaver,

Is it cheaper if you 3d print your own minis?

Tathas,

I’m not sure if that’s viable for 40k. You might not be welcomed to play with fake minis. You could surely do that with friends though.

My understanding is that you’re only allowed to play what you own, no stand ins.

EmptyMusic,

It is a bit more complicated than that. Basically, people you play with won’t care so long as you’ve painted it to a reasonable standard and there isn’t some massive size difference that’d give some notable advantage or disadvantage compared to official minis. The same is true of official ones where people are picky about unpainted plastic but its likely more a thing with printed ones. Independent game stores also won’t really give a shit since you’re likely buying paints and stuff from them anyway.

GW stores are the ones that will have a problem with it, along with tournaments they host. I have heard stories of people getting shit for using forgeworld stuff (which is GW’s speciality site basically, they sell the really big models and some more niche like, regiment-specific stuff) in stores because it isn’t something the stores themselves will specifically sell. This is because of corporate policy though, no one wants to lose their job.

Obi,
@Obi@sopuli.xyz avatar

So literally pay to win?

Tathas,

Well, more pay to play.

But if you want to participate in a battle with a large army, you need to have that army.

CompN12,

Short answer is probably not, it depends.

If you have a printer set up and ready to go, it certainly can be. But for me to get a printer and all the fixings (printer, cure/wash station, resin, tent and ventilation for fumes) I was out about 700 Cad. And then you gotta get stls, some are easy others are way harder. Some of those are free and some are paid. And then I myself am paying for lychee pro, so that’s around a Netflix sub down the drain. Once that’s all clear there is the insane time investment. I can easily spend 30-60 min processing a job and prepping the printer for the next print. Finding, prepping an stl to print if everything is good can take as short as an hour, but can take much longer if things are hard to find, or if it’s a complex object to support. And then if you fail that print, all that time and resin (not too terrible, my large prints are like 5 bucks, small minis are under a dollar) is wasted.

After all that, there is still things I plan to buy. I lack the patience to try printing void dragon c’tan, and there’s only one source that I could hope to buy a decent imotekh stl, and it’d be more expensive than buying the model (I regret buying it. That is the first and last time I ever get a finecast model).

For me the fun is in the journey not the product. I’ve had a lot of fun printing my necrons. I don’t plan on playing in anything official, just friends so that angle isn’t an issue. I went into it wanting to take up 3d printing as its own hobby and I do not regret going this route, but building a single 2k army like I plan to is not worth it. Past that I imagine the savings will roll in, but I don’t really care for another army. Ethics wise I’m happy to vote with my wallet by diverting money to printing VS. paying for overpriced models.

southernbeaver,

I feel like learning how to 3d print is a skill that could be very useful. Maybe I’m trying to justify it 😅

bbigras,

Onepagerule is cheaper.

Aux,

Mountain biking.

anonymous5432,

Why would you not expect that to have a high ceiling either monetarily or in sheer skill? I mean bikes are expensive, and it’s a sport practiced on a professional level.

themeatbridge,

I think it’s a question of how high the ceiling can go. There are people who helicopter to the tops of mountains to drop into a downhill, and their ridiculously expensive bike will need many parts replaced at the end of it.

Aux,

Because you can get a basic bike for like a couple of hundred quid and commute for years. It’s just a basic transport type. Yet it grew into quite an absurd, dangerous and expensive hobby.

AnUnusualRelic,
@AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

The bike is one thing, but you also need a mountain.

Aux,

That too.

southernbrewer,

I’ll do the reverse - I think most people would expect homebrewing beer to be quite hard to get started with, but for $50 you can get everything you need to start making a really quite good beer, and save money at the same time (homebrewed beer is usually much cheaper than store bought)

If you want to get started search for “brew in a bag” and buy a kit beer mix. You’ll need a handful of equipment like a brew bag and fermenter, but that stuff is really cheap.

Then you can indeed go down a massive rabbit hole of refinements, but it just amazed me that the first beer you make will already be a good one.

Cethin,

From my experience, it’s not that much cheaper, especially after considering time cost. One issue with it though is that you get a lot of the same type of beer, which isn’t totally bad but also somewhat puts a stopper on trying new beer. It’s great if you’ve got plenty of people to share it with though, but I don’t have enough that enjoy beer.

reverendsteveii,

You can get started homebrewing cider or mead for like $50, especially if what you’re brewing isn’t carbonated so you can just store it in whatever. You can also buy home garage versions of fully automated brewing and canning lines that will run you into the tens of thousands, not accounting for consumables. It escalates fast.

CmdrShepard,

I imagine the ceiling here is a full production facility rivaling that of Coors or Budweiser.

MNByChoice,

There have got to be a few microbreweries where a home setup just got out of hand. Or, Rather, there were. Lots of microbreweries go out of business.

Platomus,

I feel like a lot of people might think miniature building/painting could be easy - or at least quick.

It isn’t.

Cethin,

From my understanding it’s also expensive as hell.

As an alternative, the game Moonbreakers has a really impressive model painting tool. You paint your figures that you play the game with (though there are defaults you can choose from also). It’s an under-appreciated game with top tier voice-acting also. The story is told in audio form you can play whenever in the game, so you can just chill out painting while listening to the game’s story too.

Will_WMGC,

That’s the one from the people who made subnautica, right?

Cethin,

Yep.

AustralianSimon,

Another Moonbreaker player!

Graylitic,

Coffee, specifically espresso. While you can technically get started with a couple hundred bucks and a ton of sheer will, the rabbit hole is intense, with proper espresso machines often costing well into the thousands, and grinders matching it.

Ironically, getting into cheap espresso equipment is probably more costly than never getting into it, as there’s always something better and marginal costs come into play.

Lianodel,

I was going to say it’s a lot less expensive if you don’t need espresso. An aeropress is around $40, I bought mine nearly two decades ago, and still use it daily!

…then I realized I spent $160 on the grinder right next to it. So I’m not totally immune. :P

AustralianSimon,

I have an aeropress for solo coffee at home and a deltapress at work, espresso machine for batch coffees.

KevonLooney,

You can get a French press for $10 - $20. Get the beans from a coffee shop and ask them to grind it.

You now have great coffee for a month.

Doctorsnorky,

Have you seen the price of polo ponies lately?

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