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The Discogs x We Are Rewind cassette player retails for $180
Orders opened April 9 and have yet to sell out, total production is limited to 150 units
This is a final sale item with no refunds offered
Discogs just dropped a co-branded cassette player with We Are Rewind and Recording The Masters, and it checks a lot of boxes for the analog audio collector: aluminum alloy casing, Bluetooth connectivity, a 12-hour lithium battery, and an exclusive matte black colorway that you can’t get anywhere else. Only 150 were made. The problem for resellers is that the math doesn’t love you here, and the product has been available for three days without selling out.
The Discogs x We Are Rewind cassette player is a three-way collaboration with tape manufacturer Recording The Masters. It runs on a built-in lithium battery (12 hours of playback), connects via Bluetooth or 3.5mm jack, and ships with a premium RTM C60 blank cassette.
The exclusive Discogs matte black colorway is the differentiator — it’s the only We Are Rewind model finished this way. Units are still in stock as of this writing.
Here’s where it gets tricky. We Are Rewind has done limited editions before, and those typically retail around $200. On the secondary market, they trade for $160 to $180. Standard We Are Rewind models retail for $160 and resell for $120 to $150.
This Discogs collab comes in at $180 retail — already at the top of what previous limited editions have fetched on resale. After eBay’s 13% fee, you’d need to clear roughly $207 just to break even. That’s above where comparable We Are Rewind limiteds are currently trading, and you’d be betting that the Discogs branding alone pushes demand past where it’s ever been for this brand.
The fact that 150 units haven’t sold out in three days at this price point is worth sitting with. That’s not a death sentence — this is a niche product for a niche audience — but it does suggest the collector demand isn’t overwhelming.
Discogs has a devoted user base, and a branded physical product from the world’s largest cassette and vinyl marketplace is a legitimately interesting collectible. The 150-unit ceiling is real — this colorway won’t be reprinted. If you’re already deep in the analog audio community and believe the Discogs name carries enough weight to push prices past $200, that’s not an unreasonable bet. It is still a bet.
At $180 with no refunds, this is a tough recommend as a resell play. Secondary market data on We Are Rewind doesn’t support the margin, and there’s no exit if it doesn’t move. If you’re a Discogs collector or cassette enthusiast who’d be happy owning it regardless, that changes things. For everyone else, this one is worth watching rather than acting on.
Food & Beverages
Resellers are already flipping these chocolates
Art & Collectibles
These won't be available for long
Home & Living
Oh yeah, that's medium rare