It's a tough pill to swallow considering I bought my GR II on sale in 2016 for $699 USD (on sale from $799 I believe). There was talk of Ricoh's imaging department really being on the ropes financially. DSLRs and the A7 dominated the market. Demand for compact cameras was slumping hard due to smartphones.
That $699 is $953 in 2025 dollars according to the BLS. My gut instinct is that the CPI is kept artificially low, but for simplicity's sake, let's assume that number. Now add the new sensor, IBIS, upgraded internal storage and other incremental improvements, plus the new fixed costs for manufacturing, overhead, marketing and any tariff related costs, plus Ricoh wanting to maximize profit after the hype of the GR III, years of financial struggles and a dwindling compact market leading to less competition. I can understand how Ricoh would price this at $1499, especially with my professional background (investment banking/private equity and product management for auto makers, where I had to price new vehicles and ensure we hit profit targets and minimizing discounts, which hurt resale values and our ability to lease cars at reasonable levels). On the other hand, I'm not blind to how this prices enthusiasts out of the market and hurts the hobby. I am hanging on to my GR II for now, but I would be very interested in a GR IVx.
One of the interesting second order effects is the lift in used camera values. I went to trade in some old gear, and the camera shop begged me to trade in my GR II with the GF-1 flash unit. The trade-in value exceeded my gently used D750, 85mm 1.8G, 24-70 2.8 and 24-120. And my GR II, while perfectly functional, looks horrendous and is missing the ring around the lens. Ultimately I declined, and I'm glad I did.