Regardless of what you think about the value of the truck, Toyota has slowly been phasing towards quantity over quality. Anyone with a Tacoma knows this all too well when you look at the steering, leaf spring issues, shift to Spicer drivelines, etc. It hasn't been like a big hit in the face but rather bits and pieces over time.
My friend has a new body style Tacoma and the rack input has measurable freeplay. Back in the day any free play in any steering component was unacceptable by Japanese standards. Now a days...this has become the norm. Sorry but people continue to buy domestic products for that kind of quality. So now Toyota gets away with it and charges a premium for it. Would I buy one? What else is left?
You want an out of the box wheeler you have many options like...Jeep, and uh...Jeep. Long gone are the days of Broncos, Blazers, Rams, Wranglers, Cherokees, Samurai/Sidekick, Hilux/Tacoma etc. all the way to the luxury crowd of Discovery, Defender, Range Rover Classic, Land Cruiser, etc. It was pick your brand, price, and poison. I'm sorry but I personally don't spend $35k on a truck, dump another $5k-10k outfitting it so it is usable (skids, gears, lockers, etc.) and then go bash it down a mountain.
Manufacturers have really left the US market out to dry. Even Jeep, you know the offroad brand of Chrysler group, primarily sells heavily badged mall crawlers.
It just sucks but one day the used market eventually will start to dry up. The Tacoma will always follow suite with the 4Runner for parts interchanging. Unfortunately both are chasing after premium luxury instead of premium durability that built the Hilux and Land Cruiser heritage.