I'm genuinely surprised by the consensus of replies so far. In hindsight, I should have clarified further by what exactly I was trying to get across when presenting the topic. I've slightly tweaked the OP.
Would I pay $100 for games? Yes, but only for very few. Looking back at some experiences I've had, I can confidently say that my time playing some games was certainly worth a higher value than what I paid. For instance, I purchased Persona 5 Royal for only $40. Knowing what I do now of its amount of quality content offered alongside the fun I had while playing, I would gladly spend $100 on it. It's such an easy "yes" answer for me because I can even see myself playing this game again later on in life.
Like I mentioned, not every game is an experience worth a high price tag. And I'm questioning how certain some responses are in saying no modern game is worth that kind of price (although, again, I did not convey my question well originally.) Yes, sales exist. Of course it is possible to obtain games at a discounted price, and it is even easy to secure many games for free through other means. But I am fully confident that everyone here has played at least one title that they know is valued to them at a higher price. And that is the question I was originally trying to get at.
Maybe some of your fondest memories from long ago are from creating a hand-drawn map of the game's overworld screen by screen, such as with titles like The Legend of Zelda or Dragon Warrior. Or LAN parties playing Quake and other first-person multiplayer games of the time? Visiting arcades to play Street Fighter II at every possible chance? Having a group of friends spend the night to play Mario Kart 64, Super Smash Bros., and Goldeneye 007? Experiencing some of 3D's earliest classics such as Super Mario 64 and Final Fantasy VII? Becoming so invested in massive online games such as World of Warcraft?
Or, maybe some highlight memories relate to more modern games. Playing through the narrative-rich The Last of Us and witnessing a beautiful father-daughter relationship unfold in the most hopeless of times? Reliving the moment of time when so many—traditional gamer or not—seemed connected through Pokémon Go during its peak? Overcoming through so many trial-and-error attempts at besting Cuphead? Are these "absolutely no" responses considering instances and memories like these? That no game has left the impression that it's valued at $100 to them personally?
When factoring in how quality-dense some games are such as the ones above in my OP, it's such a clear opinion of mine that I would certainly pay a higher price tag for some games I've played. This is even disregarding the impact some games have had on me which helped mold who I am today that I experienced much earlier in life, whether the amount of content (or, at times, even its quality of content) was high or not.