I think it's important to point out here that in the world of stocks (and valuing things), "expensive" means "overvalued" and "cheap" means "undervalued." So in terms of game stocks on the simExchange, a stock is only "expensive" if it is forecasting more copies will be sold than it should.
I think what you mean is Pokemon Diamond/Pearl (DS) has a price with a large number, which shouldn't matter at all as stock prices are all relative to what they are predicting. The smallness or largeness of the number should not affect your valuation.
Google is worth the same at $500 a share vs $50 a share if they did a 10-1 split (meaning multiplied each share by 10). The value represented by the shares would be the same. In the simExchange terms, the stock would be the same if they lowered the price from 1,300 DKP to 130 DKP and said each 1 DKP means 100,000 copies sold instead of 10,000 copies sold (this would just make some things confusing if stock prices were inconsistent in their representation).
All that matters is the actual amount of capital you invest. Buying 10 shares of a 1,000 DKP stock is the same thing as buying 1,000 shares of a 10 DKP stock. You have 10,000 DKP at risk.
Just an FYI. Lemme know if something doesn't make sense and I'll try to clarify.
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I think it's important to point out here that in the world of stocks (and valuing things), "expensive" means "overvalued" and "cheap" means "undervalued." So in terms of game stocks on the simExchange, a stock is only "expensive" if it is forecasting more copies will be sold than it should.
I think what you mean is Pokemon Diamond/Pearl (DS) has a price with a large number, which shouldn't matter at all as stock prices are all relative to what they are predicting. The smallness or largeness of the number should not affect your valuation.
Google is worth the same at $500 a share vs $50 a share if they did a 10-1 split (meaning multiplied each share by 10). The value represented by the shares would be the same. In the simExchange terms, the stock would be the same if they lowered the price from 1,300 DKP to 130 DKP and said each 1 DKP means 100,000 copies sold instead of 10,000 copies sold (this would just make some things confusing if stock prices were inconsistent in their representation).
All that matters is the actual amount of capital you invest. Buying 10 shares of a 1,000 DKP stock is the same thing as buying 1,000 shares of a 10 DKP stock. You have 10,000 DKP at risk.
Just an FYI. Lemme know if something doesn't make sense and I'll try to clarify.