I have a Bjursta table from Ikea. It fits nicely in our dining nook for normal use, and when I want to game I slap in the extender leaves and it easily accomodates six people plus GM. Some of it's pine, some of it's particleboard -- I knew what I was buying when I got it, and I'm satisfied. It cost me $200. This is a ton cheaper than I'd have gotten a similar table made completely of solid wood.
My chairs are also from IKEA, and I paid more for the six of them in total than I did for the table. I could have gone cheaper, but people sit on chairs and they need to be sturdy. Thus, no way was I shopping at the bottom of the price range.
If you know the IKEA product matrix, you'll get what you want there without surprises. IKEA has three price ranges -- high, medium, and low; they have four styles. When they develop new product, they start out by figuring out where the holes are in their current product line and develop furniture to fill the holes. The Bjurstas are the cheap minimalist style tables; the IKEA Stockholm tables are a high price range item.
Another example -- my bookshelves need to be sturdier than my tables, because hey, I put more weight on them. (I'm a gamer. Come on.) So when I went to buy bookshelves, I did not get the cheap Billy shelves. For my slew of paperbacks, I wound up with pricy solid wood IKEA Stockholm shelves; for gaming books I wound up with a bunch of Expedits -- not solid wood but still a mid-range shelf in the product matrix, and ideal for 8.5x11" books.
When people get down on IKEA, it's usually because they saw the cheapo Billy shelves and got a few and saw 'em fall apart within a year, which they do. But that's not the only thing they offer.
Anyhow, I voted yes, because I already have a gaming table from IKEA.
