That's absolutely right that the price that one deems accptable is based on context (i.e where you're buying)."I won't overpay for beer" is a relative statement for me. A beer made at home versus grocery store versus beer store versus restaurant all have different price ceilings. For example, I know that the price of a beer I buy at a restaurant is going to hurt because I'll only get something in the higher ABV range (RIS, Quad, Tripel) and so I'll only have a couple, relax because it's a night out and not grumble that I can make something similar for $1.15. I do the same thing with a burger joint or a steak house.
Side note: I wasn't aware, until I read this thread, that you all have the "hipster" thing going on like in the US (could have started in the UK, I don't know). I haven't had a NEIPA or anything similar. I haven't run across any hipsters and have no personal opinion of a hipster. The main knock, from what I gather, is that this group, allegedly, is willing to overpay for the newest beer no matter the quality and that this group influences the craft beer market/microbreweries. Maybe so, maybe not. If the product I like dwindles from the alleged catering to a subgroup, it just means making more beer at home.
Crazy cans: At the specialty beer store, there are so many options and, probably, half with these insanely busy labels that I just pass over because they're like street graffiti that I can't read immediately. I just assume they are targeted to a different group.
From what I can tell, I think the "craft beer movement" came over from the US. I lived in Houston for two years (2013-2015). I don't recall much in the way of craft beer in the UK before I moved there, then witnessed it in full flow in and around the states, and by the time I came back, it seemed to be picking up here too. It's worth knowing that my tastes changed over those few years, and my memory is appauling for someone in their early 30s.
I certainly don't recall all the "crazy cans" that are available now back then in the UK (plenty in the US). The funny thing I think about the crazy artwork on cans and pump clips is that I assume they're meant to stand out, but to me, they're now all so similarly psychedelic that they end up being just one big blur of unicorn vomit, and the simple designs stand out to me more as a result.