Sir, that is not the point.
I was on your TAF thread, where it became apparent you were flipping the pin, having secured it for a much lower price a few weeks earlier. I even commented on the TAF thread.
You, at the time, IIRC bragged about how you were happy to be unpopular. You said IIRC everyone posting negatively couldn't afford the pin and, thus, by implication, nothing you wrote had real-life consequences. You then took the pin to eBay:
Is it, or is it not the Addams Family from FB last week? That be the question. Whether it be nobler in the mind to suffer a credit dot or the prospect of outrageous fortune
Lots of us look at pinball machines we have no intention, or even interest, in buying. Some of us are just price/market geeks. I mean, I'm reading this thread and I'm not even interested in owning an Addams Family.
I, personally, just turned up for the '£7600 Addams when another Addams is for sale on the site right now for £10k+', and stayed for the 'is this an outrageous attempt to flip?' drama
I'd...
Subsequently, you posted on my thread to offer me a TZ.
I'm not a Russian bot, I'm a genuine human with a memory (or maybe a David Icke lizard person wearing a shucked human skin, you just never know...

). And, thus, if you behave in a dubious way on one occasion, your behaviour does actually have real-life consequences on other occasions. People are less likely to believe your written remarks about a pin, and they will automatically make assumptions about the price you might ask, the price you paid for it, and the likely condition.
I wish I didn't have to spell this out, but - obviously - I do.
[I apologise to the mods, in advance, if I'm speaking out of turn here. I don't want to get into an argument. I'd just like you to reflect on the fact that people responding to your threads are real humans, who own pinball machines, and - if you p**s them off - it will affect your ability to sell pins to those people in future. So, play nice


]