Stopped by our local camera store yesterday, which has a big set of locked glass cabinets dedicated to used gear. Pre-pandemic it was full of all kinds of goodies, mostly vintage Nikon and Canon as well as quite a selection of medium format used gear, and some large format cameras and lenses too. Then it was almost empty, and yesterday I noted how it was beginning to fill up a little more now. The counter person in charge told me that just as soon as any real film camera in decent condition shows up, either 35mm or MF, it almost instantly sells. Not so with used digital; that crowd only wants the "latest and greatest". But at times, vintage film cameras, especially classic Nikon and MF brands, sell at a faster pace there than the big selection of new digis at the opposite counter. And if anything, they can be a bit overpriced when it comes to used gear. The sheer amount of 35mm and 120 film being processed at several local lab also indicates considerable demand in this area. But any new 35mm film camera would have a high bar of expectation to meet, if it were to successfully enter the contest. It would have to EARN its reputation. Nothing equivalent to the K1000 would do that; it would have to compete with vintage Nikon F-series or the solid build quality of early Pentax, etc.