Somewhere along the way, golf balls became collectibles.
That is a sentence I never thought I would write.
A golf ball is supposed to be disposable. You hit it into the woods, into the water, or into someone else’s backyard and move on. But Vice’s Moon Rock golf balls have created a problem most golfers never expected to have.
Nobody wants actually to hit them.
The limited-edition golf balls have become one of the strangest collectibles in golf. Originally released as a small-batch product, Moon Rocks have exploded on the secondary market, with some listings reaching hundreds of dollars and one eBay listing showing a dozen at nearly $1,000.

And that creates an interesting question:
Are these golf balls valuable because they are actually special, or because golfers simply don’t want to be the person who loses one?
The answer is probably a little bit of both.
The Moon Rocks are visually unlike anything else on the course. Their unique appearance makes them stand out, and golfers immediately recognized that they were different from a normal dozen balls sitting on a store shelf.
But underneath the paint and the hype, they’re still golf balls. They are meant to be hit.
That is what makes the whole thing fascinating. Golfers spend thousands of dollars chasing tiny performance gains, yet one of the hottest golf products right now is something many owners are afraid to use.
It is the ultimate golfer dilemma:
Do you enjoy the thing you bought, or do you protect it because it might be worth more tomorrow?
Either way, Vice accidentally created something golf rarely sees: a piece of equipment that people want to own more than they want to use.
And honestly, that might be the most impressive part.
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