If you don't spend much time shopping for vintage AV gear, you likely have wildly distorted ideas about price and availability of once-common gadgets such as the humble cassette player.
Many people assume that thrift stores are awash in vintage Walkmen and Trinitron tube TVs, but that cycle actually happened about 20 years ago. Now it's mostly iPod Minis with dead batteries, 480p flat-screens that weigh as much as a Buick, and cheapo Crosley turntables in Urban Outfitters colorways.
This presents a dilemma for the cassette tape enthusiast. When it comes to portable cassette players, you have the unpleasant choice of paying $300 for a very nice restored Walkman from Japan on eBay and praying the pinch rollers don't fail a week after its journey across the Pacific, or buying a $20 cheapie on Amazon from a brand with an all-caps name and hoping it doesn't shred your $25 tape of Appetite for Destruction (or, worse, the copy you've kept for 35 years). I've tried both premium vintage players and the Chinese-made TOMASHI and wouldn't recommend either when you can buy this cassette player from the French company Rewind.
If you're getting into tapes, the Rewind player is the best cassette player I've found, by a healthy margin. It sounds great and has enough battery life to listen to everything the Beatles ever released on a single charge. It's a big, sturdy player that has performed flawlessly after more than a year of testing. I've flown with it and used it on several long road trips, and I've never had a tape eaten.
Tale of the Tape
It may be worth a brief discussion of why anyone would seek out cassettes in 2025. Tapes obviously don't have the clarity of CDs or the expansive sonic range of vinyl. They are also relatively fragile compared to other physical formats. Every cassette has moving parts that wear out over time, and they can fail because of extreme temperatures or misaligned playing mechanisms. There's even a tiny felt pad that can fall off and need to be replaced. I have cassettes that are 45 years old; I'm truly amazed they still work at least as well as my 44-year-old knees.