Utilizing wealth to manipulate or own another person.
What is fascinating is the behavioral economics here. The modern "Rich" comic collector isn't buying Action Comics #1 to read it. They are buying it as a deprecating asset, a visual trophy. Meanwhile, the "Public" collector buys the Facsimile Edition (a $4 reprint) to actually enjoy the story. Both are participating in the same ritual, separated only by wallet depth. rich bitch 2 public toy comics
Premise and tone Set across shared urban stages, Rich Bitch 2 imagines a world where designer toys and limited-edition action figures aren’t only commodities but characters with ambitions, anxieties, and very human brand loyalties. The tone is wry, energetic, and occasionally acidic: equal parts pop-culture critique and affectionate toy-nostalgia. Expand this into a full 800–1,000 word blog post