No, My apologies Okie, quibids is [no polite way to say it].
While I can see SOME legitimacy in having the auction extend as long as the price keeps going up (like on a real auction), the part where they CHARGE the bidder is asinine, the whole point of Quibids model is to artificially keep the price low, to encourage rampant bidding, making money for Quibids on every bid increment.
So while buying a digital camera for $40 that normally sells for $300 seems awesome! until you look at the math.
at $.02 bid increments, $40 selling price takes 2000 Total bids.
2,000 bids x $0.60 per bid = $1,200+$40 final value = $1,240 total price paid to Quibids for the item. Heck, even at a $20 selling price for the camera, quibids sells a $300 camera for $620(total). Even at just a $10 (Wow, what a deal!) final price, quibids nets in a total of $310... for a $300 retail camera.
The only difference is that the cost is distributed over many bidders. So yes, the winner pays $40 + ($0.60 x # of bids he made to win.... likely many)).... but everyone who didn't win paid Quibids $0.60 * the number of bids they made.
Ultimately, yes its a great idea... for quibids, and a horrible idea for everyone else.
Will there be the odd steal-of-a-deal? Surely. Problem is, you have to pay $0.60 for NOTHING, repeatedly, and hopefully earn the opportunity to buy something at a discounted rate.
wildfly wrote:As for the bidding model, I think I'll simply say that it is not for me.
Not for anyone with a basic understanding of mathematics.