After hiring Lucius Fox.While writing another post a DC related question popped into my head and I was curious if anyone knew the answer. When did Bruce Wayne go from being a millionaire to being a billionaire?
I honestly liked the short run a few years ago where Lex tried to be a hero and even tried (or maybe succeeded, I can't remember if it was official) to join the Justice League. He was still an egotistic a-hole, and in the end he went back to being a villain, but it showed he wasn't just one thing.
Didn't that story with Lex and Lena actually involve the Conner Kent Superboy, not Superman? Or am I misremembering?
Lex only went back to being a villain because Snyder wanted him to form the Injustice League and be the main villain of his Death Metal arc. And Bendis rolled with it. Luthor went right back to being more nuanced when that run was over.
EDIT: Sorry, not as soon as it was over--more like a couple of years after that.
I'm not completely unsympathetic to your point, but I do think there's value in showing the side of Luthor that relishes being a right bastard for its own sake. I liked that Superboy story, and John Byrne's "Metropolis 900 Mi" is another excellent example. Luthor's brilliant, and capable of some nuance and complexity as you argue, but he's fundamentally narcissistic, selfish, and cruel, and those qualities will ultimately always overcome any better angels he may possess.
That makes sense, that seems like the era where you'd start to see billionaires overtaking millionaires as the standard for people with an extreme of money. And it's kinda scary to think that we know look like we're getting to a point where trillionaires will be overtaking billionaire. I guess by the time we hit 2034 Bruce Wayne will probably be a trillionaire.Y1 might have been intended to be set in the 1970s. Anyway, Denny O'Neil became the editor of the Batman comics in 1986, and I'm pretty sure he'd be the one to make that change.
A quick online search suggested that Bruce was referred to as a billionaire in DKR (I'm too lazy to check ... come to think of it, I'm not sure if I currently own a copy), and that he was regularly referred to as a billionaire in comics and other media in 1994. Which kinda makes sense, Zero Hour just happened and the question how Bruce funds all the Bat-vehicles and gadgets was explored during that era, and then there also was the release of Batman Forever, which referred to Bruce as a billionaire.
I'm not completely unsympathetic to your point, but I do think there's value in showing the side of Luthor that relishes being a right bastard for its own sake. I liked that Superboy story, and John Byrne's "Metropolis 900 Mi" is another excellent example. Luthor's brilliant, and capable of some nuance and complexity as you argue, but he's fundamentally narcissistic, selfish, and cruel, and those qualities will ultimately always overcome any better angels he may possess.
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