If the tickets are good for every game and you get a free pie, pint and programme then it probably isn't that bad. For me it's conditional on EVERY game being included and getting the advertised 'free' benefits in every game as an individual.
This season you've got roughly 4 friendlies, 19 league games, 9 European games and 3 in the Cup to make 35 games for £2400. Obviously there's the COVID-19 refund but you aren't normally factoring anything like that in. If anything, the poor cup runs and lack of replays is probably offset by the extra European games skewed towards value for them.
Dividing £2400 by 35 games gives £68 a game and while that's pretty dear, I'd need to see how it compares to similar seats in the Main Stand. I have no real idea of how much a pie, pint and programme are these days but I'm not sure you'd get all three for much less than £10. £10 at 35 games takes another £350 off the price theoretically for each person.
According to my horribly simplistic and open to immediate scrutiny calculations, that's roughly around £60 per game if you're making the most of the 'free' things you get. I don't think that's particularly unreasonable for a hospitality-lite experience and would like to know where I'm going obviously and massively wrong here. I used to really enjoy it when I sat there and think that a big part of it is the experience around it as much as the price/seat. We could get in at 1.30pm (or whenever it opened) and you'd get to spend time with the other person you're with watching the football. At half-time you get to get inside when it's freezing for a bit and the toilets are better. After the game, you've got the cash bar opportunity to spend more time with the person you've went with and the added bonus of an extra game on TV to watch (usually) and missing the Subway rush.
I'm not in the business of selling Bar72 tickets but if I'm right about the above, I'm open to it.