you can't really be sure the housing market price affected by various things and the dense population is one of them, if everyone is looking for a house big chance the price for a house gonna increase.
based on this data alone that i got from this site
https://www.nesto.ca/home-buying/vancouver-housing-market-outlook/The average selling price of a home in Vancouver increased by 2.8% year-over-year to $1,205,800 in April 2024.
The average selling price of a single-family home in Vancouver increased by 6.3% year-over-year to $2,039,800 in April 2024.
The average selling price of a townhouse/multiplex in Vancouver increased by 4.3% year-over-year to $1,127,200 in April 2024.
The average selling price of a condo in Vancouver increased by 3.2% year-over-year to $776,500 in April 2024.
The average rent in Vancouver decreased by 8.0% year-over-year to $2,982 for April 2024.
currently the price keeps climbing, i heard in canada the reason of this is because there population are too dense packed into one city alone including Vancouver, you can say each region differ but general rule of thumb if the region is too densely packed with people looking for rents and housing the logic would be the price rise as stated before the only solution if you don't want to wait is to buy house in the countryside which offer larger land for significantly lower prices but the disadvantage is that the public facilities are nowhere to be seen.
also you should know that if we are talking about 2008 housing bubble pops it was caused by people buying houses with little down payment and it got approved easily offering subprime mortgages to low income homebuyers with lax lending standarts leading to series of defaults which inevitably also caused massive disaster to the economy and therefore demand for homes plummeted significantly which pops the bubbles, i don't think such scenario will be playing out again but we'll see.