
UPDATE: I open the place on an entirely different ISP/network, and it’s working fine with that ISP. Sometimes the error is slightly different and says that the place is not part of a game. I have also tried editing from multiple computers and have reinstalled Studio and Roblox. I am able to load and edit the baseplate place and a smaller test place from my account, although for every place I load, it is taking several minutes to load. I’ve tried reverting to the last good published version, but even that version gives me errors. When not fighting monsters and criminals on Earth, Diana travels through space and between mythological realms where earthly material wealth has no meaning.I am no longer able to edit my games main place. 2020's "Wonder Woman" #759 sees Diana once again acting as Themyscira's ambassador and buying ersatz IKEA furniture for her Washington D.C. Despite their loss of title, Diana and her sister Donna Troy are, explicitly, fabulously wealthy. By 2001's "Wonder Woman" #170, Themyscira has been restored but its monarchy has been abolished. When Themyscira goes missing in 1993's "Wonder Woman" #73, Diana finds herself penniless and gets a job at a fast food restaurant. The fact is that Diana's finances are not logically trackable. She's a diplomat, but ambassadors and diplomats typically aren't paid particularly well.

She's an immortal, but hasn't been in "Patriarch's World" long enough to accumulate wealth through longterm investments.

She's a princess, but from a nation that does not seem to practice capitalism internally and is typically resistant or even hostile to foreign trade. That's an incredibly vast margin, but we'd wager that Kord peaked somewhere on the low end of that scale for one simple reason: By the time of his murder in 2005's "Countdown to Infinite Crisis" #1, Ted has lost almost his entire fortune, and it's frankly very difficult for a billionaire to go broke ( though it's been done).Īt the same time, it's hard to pin down how rich Diana actually is or where the wealth comes from. The CEOs of Intel and Samsung are estimated to be worth $74 million and $17 billion respectively. We don't know enough about the company to create a definite figure for his net worth, but we might create an estimate by examining the wealth of the CEOs of large tech hardware companies in our own world.

In the "Post-Crisis" continuity in which DC Comics were set between 19, Ted Kord took his father's company, Kord Omniversal, from the brink of collapse and turned it into a leading technology firm, using his share of the profits to fund a costumed crimefighting career as the Blue Beetle. Like many a costumed adventurer, Ted Kord is the son of a wealthy businessman.
