I don't know in which exact place of the spectrum I belong, but I don't feel the need to get the top notch stuff all the time and even less swapping or collecting gear every so often for the sake of it.
Don't get me wrong, I am one kind of a performance geek, and if there is anything that get me frustrated very quickly is when I know that something in my gear is holding me back from achieving what I consider at the moment as a good performance. As humans there is a heck lot of ways we introduce inconsistencies in our shooting despite practicing towards getting them under control as much as possible. And this process of analyzing and correcting is usually quicker when you can have a dependable, well built rig, that you can have a high level of confidence into. It eliminates most of the "was it me or the rig ?" guesswork.
But another thing that I value a lot is the beauty of functionnal simplicity (and this is where " beauty is in the eyes of the beholder" comes into play for me). I won't be spending any money on overly expensive stuff if they don't bring anything valuable to the table.
My best example is not a gun but a bow. I've spent many years shooting bows exclusively (longbows and compounds alike), and did a lot of competition both in and outdoors. After spending spending a couple years with an entry/mid range compound bow to gather knowledge about this type of shooting I upgraded to a quality bow, with a lot of features for achieving a high level of accuracy. It wasn't made out of carbon fiber, nor with fancy cuts into the riser nor flashy anodized paintjob. Just a longer camo painted hybrid target/hunting compound, but with all the essentials features to be precisely tuned by myself at home. I did not bought an expensive scope, but sticked to a quality sight without magnification more reliable in low light condition or under the rain, a reliable index trigger realease aid and a short stabilizer, together with some quality arrows that I put together myself. The whole package probably cost me about the same as a bare, top of the line, bow of the time, but I was very pleased by how it looked and how it shot. It was MY bow and I spent countless hours being proficient with, perfecting my form and looking for small upgrades I could do along the way.
I went all the way up to some national league matches and often ending on the podium or close, with that bow that many archers would be considering as an average, uncompetitive hunting rig. And that was something that I really enjoyed : to get excellent results with that gear that I carefully put together and adjusted to my needs, without buying what the market want to sell you as the "ultimate best of the year" . The bonus satisfaction was being able to shut the mouth of those snobs with expensive fancy bows and arrows that were smiling at "teh hairy guy with teh hunting bow" before seeing my name on top of theirs on the scoreboard at the end of the day...
Even if I'm not shooting anymore, I still have this bow with me and won't be selling it, as I tend to grow quickly emotional with the stuff that I spent a fair bit of my time with.
I believe that I will follow the same path with firearms, I'm doing a lot of researchs because I can't really afford to buy and sell gear all the time to find the right fit, but so far it seems like I'm not that much attracted by the high end stuff.
Simpler things like, for example, the MDT Oryx chassis looks to me much more elegant and appealing in it's simpicity than a lot of other more expensive alternatives that may not do a lot more better for me. And for the price I won't have any reluctancy to get out the tools and make a few upgrades myself (like new sling mounting points...) to get it up to my needs. With a good tikka action and barrel in it, decent glass and some home brewed ammo, as long as it shoots almost as good as the more expensive stuff (don't have to be the smoothest operating bolt nor the smoothest recoil dampener) no need to look elsewhere unless I need a different purpose rifle, which won't result in me selling the other anyway.
Sorry for the novel