I don't have a leg in this race.. But it's a good opportunity to point out that that value is subjective to the individual. Value does not equal price or cost. Some will value the "item" more than it's cost, and others will not. You can't really argue over someone else's valuation because it's their own, made for their own reasons.
And, just an aside.. Emotions do not have monetary value outside your own mind.. You can't buy anything with your emotions, and there probably isn't anyone willing to pay you to be sad or happy or angry. Nobody wants to trade you emotions.. An emotion is a psychological influence on decision making, you can value your own emotion and compare it to the cost of enjoying, amplifying, or removing that emotion to something such as a movie or video game or virtual item in a video game - but it doesn't follow that someone else has to value that emotion the same way.
As for this statement:"Emotional Value" only effects the price insofar as how little or how much someone is willing to pay. Making the mount cost $200 instead of $24 does not necessarily increase any "emotional value" you might obtain by purchasing it. Second, something given to you for free can be just as pleasurable (if not more so) than earning it. For example, your workplace randomly selects an employee each month to receive a $100 gift card. They just draw a name out of a hat and the winner gets free money, you do nothing more than show up for what you're already getting paid to do. You wouldn't value that extra $100 a little more than just your regular paycheck at all? It wouldn't make you happy because you didn't "earn" it like your paycheck? Unlikely.. but this is a subjective, of course, you may not :PPlus, the "emotional value" given from these items is directly related to their price. If they were completly free and given to you with absolutly no effort required, you would not have anywhere near the same amount of pleasure for "getting" and "owning" them.