It's always interesting to me to consider which guitars speak to us as individual musicians. I have a late 80s black Fender Stratocaster that was built in the custom shop. It has an ebony fretboard, fairly standard two-point trem, and locking tuners. I am not the original owner. I first noticed it as a used guitar, hanging on the wall of a local shop in the early 90s. I played it for about 30 minutes before plugging it in. The acoustic tone was really good, and it played beautifully. After plugging it in, I noticed the tone was pretty good, but definitely could be improved; it was equipped with lace sensor pickups and sounded a little sterile compared with vintage tones. It was a good price so I bought it, and ditched the pickups for a set of Fralins. It's been my primary guitar ever since.
My strat isn't perfect. The neck pocket isn't a perfect fit for the base of the neck, and it has be occasionally reset. It isn't even that valuable. I bet it's only worth about $750 on the open market. It has honestly-earned nicks and scratches from 25 years of international touring / recording. I would honestly bet I've played at least two thousand gigs on that guitar. I wore out the frets on that guitar and had Mike Lull (renowned local luthier) refret it with stainless steel frets a few years ago. That fret job cost me more than the guitar originally did!
I've owned MUCH more valuable boutique guitars. A few years ago I bought an Eric Johnson strat. I loved that guitar, but honestly the trusty black strat just seems to have some kind of personal mojo for me. I sold the EJ strat to a friend recently, and am glad to see it getting played.
So, in terms of "will this guitar inspire me to play", that's a much better guide than anything else in my opinion. I have (ahem) a few guitars in my collection... I have other guitars that sound great and make me happy - I have numerous strats, teles, hollowbodies, and a lovely Les Paul gold top with P90s. But, that black strat just has something that made me fall for it all those years ago, and it's still my #1. We've had some great adventures together, and it just seems to be the one I always reach for. That guitar's appeal is not universally magical. When other people play my strat, they say "yeah, it's pretty good", or something to that effect. I've never encountered another person who reacts to that guitar the way I do. One of my longtime friends was quite shocked when I sold the EJ strat, because (to paraphrase) "why would you give up a perfect high-value boutique guitar that was painstakingly crafted to play and sound like a vintage strat, when your black guitar is an old mutt with weird idiosyncrasies?" Mojo is subject to the individual. If you find a guitar that makes YOU want to play more, and play better, and has a vibe that pulls you in, then go get it.