Amazon[amazon.com] has Skechers Mens Skechers Shadow - Stellar 90 (Bronze, 9 US) on sale for $24.37, among other colors and styles, ranging from $24 to $38.
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Amazon[amazon.com] has Skechers Mens Skechers Shadow - Stellar 90 (Bronze, 9 US) on sale for $24.37, among other colors and styles, ranging from $24 to $38.
Model: Skechers Street Men's,Skechers Shadow - Stellar 90,BRZ,9.5 M US
Deal History
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Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 1/27/2026, 10:49 PM
When i get Slickdeals emails, it will have "good deal" or "amazing deal" in a blue oval. This deal shows neither when it's included in emails (no good or amazing deal). The shoes I bought from this deal are already $89 ,so being over 70% off is a good deal to me (& the retail price being accurate). What determines what gets those monikers, how many thumbs up a deal gets? Those upvotes could be bots, & many of those "amazing deals", I've found, are regularly priced much lower than a deal makes it seem, or claims. This has opened my eyes to how this aote operates.
Edit: (second try) fixed typos & added clarity.
Last edited by twztid13 December 29, 2025 at 04:07 PM.
When i get Slickdeals emails, it will have "good deal" or amazing deal" in a blue oval. This has nothing when it's included in emails (no good or amazing deal). The ones o bought are already $89,,so being over 70% off is a good deal to me. What determines what gets those monikers, how many thumbs up a deal gets? Those could be bots, & many of those I've found are regularly priced much lower than a deal makes it seem, or claims. This has opened my eyes to how this aote operates.
I don't know the answer, but I've heard before that SlickDeals has algorithms in place, along with editors, who help determine how good a deal is. Specifically editors are the ones who help decide (along with the algorithms) what deals go frontpage. And yes, price manipulation is rampant. If you look for deals regularly, you constantly see products where the price is the lowest in the last 30 days, but just before 30 days ago, they had the same low price. Amazon's recent addition of a "Price History" has shed a lot of light on this manipulation, along with using other price history apps. I check these before posting deals to try to diminish posting deals that aren't really deals. But there are also some products that haven't been at the low price for awhile, so I'll go ahead and post. I take each product at face value and try to make the best decision.
I don't know the answer, but I've heard before that SlickDeals has algorithms in place, along with editors, who help determine how good a deal is. Specifically editors are the ones who help decide (along with the algorithms) what deals go frontpage. And yes, price manipulation is rampant. If you look for deals regularly, you constantly see products where the price is the lowest in the last 30 days, but just before 30 days ago, they had the same low price. Amazon's recent addition of a "Price History" has shed a lot of light on this manipulation, along with using other price history apps. I check these before posting deals to try to diminish posting deals that aren't really deals. But there are also some products that haven't been at the low price for awhile, so I'll go ahead and post. I take each product at face value and try to make the best decision.
I don't think I've seen a deal below 60 upvotes labeled as "amazing deals" in the emails (the main way I access the site). I thought 65 or 70 was threshold that changed it from good to amazing, but recently saw a few with more than 65 that were still labeled as "good". Still, this seems to be a better deal than many of the fake Skechers or under armor deals it keeps including, yet it doesn't even label it as "good". That's strange to me. I may just start searching manually for deals like i did before i bothered with the emails, now that I see that they're not necessarily promoting the best deals (although, to be fair, this deal was actually in an email, but likely because I had an alert set).
I'm also referring to the tons of bad deals they have been sending me, all with more upvotes than this deal. I realize style might play a role in the number of upvotes, but a good deal to me is how much less than retail something is, not how popular it may be, even if the popularity is genuine. If 1000 people upvote a deal that's 10% off, that shouldn't mean it's better than a deal no one has upvoted, but is 90% off. I guess it does matter if the latter is a product no one will use, but I'm mainly referencing sales on similar items (shoes, for example), & even identical brands. I just never knew I was only seeing things that some people thought were more popular as opposed to actually seeing the best discounts (which is what i consider a deal) in the emails.
BTW, i edited my previous comment, the one u quoted, to fix typos & add clarity. i was in a hurry when i wrote it. Thanks for the info.
I don't think I've seen a deal below 60 upvotes labeled as "amazing deals" in the emails (the main way I access the site). I thought 65 or 70 was threshold that changed it from good to amazing, but recently saw a few with more than 65 that were still labeled as "good". Still, this seems to be a better deal than many of the fake Skechers or under armor deals it keeps including, yet it doesn't even label it as "good". That's strange to me. I may just start searching manually for deals like i did before i bothered with the emails, now that I see that they're not necessarily promoting the best deals (although, to be fair, this deal was actually in an email, but likely because I had an alert set).
I'm also referring to the tons of bad deals they have been sending me, all with more upvotes than this deal. I realize style might play a role in the number of upvotes, but a good deal to me is how much less than retail something is, not how popular it may be, even if the popularity is genuine. If 1000 people upvote a deal that's 10% off, that shouldn't mean it's better than a deal no one has upvoted, but is 90% off. I guess it does matter if the latter is a product no one will use, but I'm mainly referencing sales on similar items (shoes, for example), & even identical brands. I just never knew I was only seeing things that some people thought were more popular as opposed to actually seeing the best discounts (which is what i consider a deal) in the emails.
BTW, i edited my previous comment, the one u quoted, to fix typos & add clarity. i was in a hurry when i wrote it. Thanks for the info.
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Edit: some have changed price since the post. Bronze 8 are $30.xx, bronze 9 are 26.92.
Edit: some have changed price since the post. Bronze 8 are $30.xx, bronze 9 are 26.92.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Edit: (second try) fixed typos & added clarity.
I'm also referring to the tons of bad deals they have been sending me, all with more upvotes than this deal. I realize style might play a role in the number of upvotes, but a good deal to me is how much less than retail something is, not how popular it may be, even if the popularity is genuine. If 1000 people upvote a deal that's 10% off, that shouldn't mean it's better than a deal no one has upvoted, but is 90% off. I guess it does matter if the latter is a product no one will use, but I'm mainly referencing sales on similar items (shoes, for example), & even identical brands. I just never knew I was only seeing things that some people thought were more popular as opposed to actually seeing the best discounts (which is what i consider a deal) in the emails.
BTW, i edited my previous comment, the one u quoted, to fix typos & add clarity. i was in a hurry when i wrote it. Thanks for the info.
I'm also referring to the tons of bad deals they have been sending me, all with more upvotes than this deal. I realize style might play a role in the number of upvotes, but a good deal to me is how much less than retail something is, not how popular it may be, even if the popularity is genuine. If 1000 people upvote a deal that's 10% off, that shouldn't mean it's better than a deal no one has upvoted, but is 90% off. I guess it does matter if the latter is a product no one will use, but I'm mainly referencing sales on similar items (shoes, for example), & even identical brands. I just never knew I was only seeing things that some people thought were more popular as opposed to actually seeing the best discounts (which is what i consider a deal) in the emails.
BTW, i edited my previous comment, the one u quoted, to fix typos & add clarity. i was in a hurry when i wrote it. Thanks for the info.
Leave a Comment