It's interesting watching the very different opinions being voiced about the very possible GFV... We're in the very excited, and will almost certainly buy category.
We're a family who used to stay club level at either the GF, BC, or BWI prior to buying DVC. Basically, once club level became an option, we used it every time. We traveled (and still travel) often with my DM, who enjoys WDW, but not alone, so at least every other trip we needed two club level rooms or a suite. We put off buying DVC for years, and I researched it pretty solidly for a year and a half before we bought. We knew DVC would save us money, but we were extremely worried that it would feel like a big step down from club level. Three years into our ownership, I can safely say that while we do miss some of the amenities and convenience of club level, we love our DVC and are very happy owners. (We haven't even been willing to go for club level at AKV, because not being able to see the savannah from our room would devastate our son.) We like always having the extra space - unless we're just adding on a night or two, we always get a one bedroom or a two bedroom villa. We stock wine and our preferred snacks in the room, and treat it like our own club level lounge.
Let's play with the numbers. Bear with me, this will get pretty complicated. If basic studios are really 200 points for a week, which would actually surprise me, you're right, and GFV really wouldn't be a good deal. On the other hand, if the
point chart is pretty similar to BLT, and you're looking at about 60 points a night for a two bedroom villa, the two bedroom suites at GF are currently priced at something like $1800 a night. The one bedroom suites are about $1000. If you're like us, and want to rotate through a few different resorts (DS adores AKL, and we love staying at Epcot resorts during F & W), you probably want enough points to stay there every other year. We stay 5 or 6 nights on our vacations usually, so lets call it a 300 point stay. We'd need 150 GFV points to do it every other year. At a $175 buy in, that would be $26,250. Let's say that 150 points runs me $1000 in dues a year, which I think is a very high estimate, but we'll assume some inflation. I'm going to assume I can find a discount code for 30% off rack rate, since even if I find a better one, I'm still paying those high hotel taxes. So we're down to $1260 a night. It would take me 21 nights in a 2 bedroom to roughly break even on the purchase price, and in the time it would take me to get to 21 nights, we might have paid as much as $7000 in dues since we're only using it every other year in this scenario. (I'm calculating that out by saying that would take us 4 years of trips, spending 5 nights for 3 trips and 6 nights for 1, which is pretty typical of our vacation habits. Since we'd only be going every other year to GFV, it would take us 7 years to get those 4 trips.) So call it one more trip, which would mean 9 years (and another $2000 in dues, which pushes us slightly into the trip in year 11), to get to the point where what we're paying in dues for each two year period is covering a stay at GFV. This doesn't strike me as at all unreasonable. Yes, we reached that point earlier on both of our current contracts, but we got developer points with AKV when we bought direct, and we got a fully loaded BWV contract resale, with an entire years' worth of banked points. If they run some sort of deals for buying GFV, the break even on the purchase price could come earlier. I know I made a lot of assumptions when calculanlting my figures, and I may be way, way off. But even assuming $175 a point, and a point chart that is roughly 60 a night for a 2 bedroom, particularly a club level 2 bedroom, it wouldn't be a bad deal at all for someone who might well be staying at the GF in club level anyway.
We're almost certain to buy if that really is going to be GFV. We've gone back and forth about BLT. I love the location, but am not wild about the style. If they really do a GFV, that solves the problem for us, and we'll probably be very happy owners there within a year of it becoming available.