Robo cop's story (2)

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'Issue #5: Cyborg-ed' showed the after-effects of the last issue and the RoboCop project finally has its preliminary success.

The doctors and spearheading geniuses marvel at their work and are already discussing what they could improve upon their cyborg and police masterpiece.

The wife is relieved to see Alex stable and fine compared to the likely unfortunate demise he could have had. Her son is still clueless about it all but he is still looking forward to seeing his father who hasn't come home in a while.

The issue also ends with the usual 'To be continued...' cliffhanger but with Alex finally opening his eyes.

Imagining the distraught, traumas, and adaptations that Murphy has to do from then on has already hyped up for the expectations that the story would have moving forward.

Everyone who read up on this new Dunphy Comics masterpiece can't help but want for the 6th issue to finally be in the stalls.

Of course, as usual, the sales for Dunphy Comics shot up from this collective amazement and expectations for what is about to come.

Be it the teens, the childish geeks, and the adults that just want to appease their children. The story struck them in varying levels that they just want to take it home and ruminate about it some more.

Newcomers from the summer buzz or the old-timers who have long been fans of the Dunphy Comics titles are all eyeing RoboCop so much that those that formed Dunphy buy train has all five consecutive issues at hand.

Everyone had long prepared to buy the Volume Books, so cheap single issues are discounted sales that can't be missed out on.

The sales of the copies are at great speeds just on that day that every comic book store is afraid to run out of stock already.

Fortunately, Dunphy Comics has scarily adapted again and increased their limited quotas to 8300,000 copies per single issue.

With 8 different Dunphy single issues on this day and on the way to being sold out, the record and market increase is at an all-time high.

Without a doubt, RoboCop is another smashing hit.

It is a testament to Dunphy Comics' strength and also another wave of heartfelt admiration to the me, The William Dunphy that made it happen.

RoboCop is so much different but much more impactful to everyone who reflected on every issue on a much deeper level.

All the other Dunphy titles are exciting and worth following on their own but RoboCop feels much more impactful than everything else.

Kids could still enjoy it for its exciting story development but the much deep-minded adults have a more profound reason for buying the story.

Of course, some much-simpler adults buy the story for the fun of it but its many mature elements have already appealed to their critical sides in one way or another.

On the Alex Murphy level, it is about a cop's battles against crime, family life, and on-the-job mishaps.

On the Omni Consumer Products' level, it is a battle against wit and corporate machinations. Also, the difference between ideological beliefs and just how far one can take things just to achieve their goals.

On the future societal level, it is the debate between technology, robots, being in between, and being caught up in it. There is no doubt that Detroit and OCP are just one little piece of the future world's map.

The sheer magnified effects of such a somewhat dystopianly futuristic livelihood when it reaches the global level could be imagined.

Would they be caught up in the battle of corporate giants or are they already caught up in it as of now?

Just the fact that corporations can buy an entire designated police department and planning to buy the entirety of Detroit sent shivers down their spines.

This is still the 1970s but everyone was already having a grim outlook on what could be and what is already present around them.

RoboCop is supposed to just be a simple comic book story meant to give enjoyment to whoever read them but a lot are given a reflection on what society is and a wake-up call on how ignorant they had been.

Of course, those extreme and well-crafted thoughts are better kept to themselves but RoboCop really gave many people a refreshed perspective on what a comic book could be.

It may just be wishful thinking but there is no doubt that many adults have their minds changed about the medium of entertainment that they previously dismissed.

Robocop's story is deceptively impressive and wow-inducing to the kids but it became much more impressively enlightening when viewed from the perspective of adults.

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It may not be as thought-provoking as Akira and Neon Genesis Evangelion but RoboCop still didn't fail in evoking the deep themes that it is hiddenly tackling.

This is one of my many intents in making the RoboCop story. Just as Akira and Evangelion awakened the Japanese and the world to what manga and anime could be, RoboCop is my mild tester to what could come next.

RoboCop is rated by CARS to the safe PG level that other Dunphy titles fall into but it also had a much more precise and implicit target towards rigid adults.

Its 'adult-orientation' didn't pertain to all the crimes and unsavory adult actions but much more to compelling adults to the hidden potential that the comic medium could be.

Of course, everything isn't about the deep and artistic potential that comic books could have but it is more about the widening of the ages and demographic that Dunphy Comics could tap into.

With some of the adults and parents on board, the social and cultural encroachment of comic books didn't have to wait until the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Awareness and integration could be done just in 1970s- 80s already and would just expand from that.

The Dunphy brand would be supplemented from there and onward, makings its future franchises much impactful and translating into an influential power that Disney has on society.

It seems that my first step towards that goal is achieved and I'm quite thankful that I noticed the societal influx of comic readers by being in company of some of my friends and their friends and families.

Through this timely observation, the limited single issues quota is agi amped up to the scary 830,000- 850,000.

The fact that all of it is being sold out means that the entire comic book industry may have just found its unexpected boom.

5 RoboCop issues along with the 3 pre-existing and scheduled titles totaled to 8. With 830,000 copies each and on its way to being sold out as the days' pass, 6.64 million issues is the new sales record that Dunphy Comics would hope to surpass again.

Even though every person may just be buying all 8 and more for one household, 830,000 people is an achievement that could not be denied from any angle.

Considering that Dunphy Comic titles usually sell out within a week or two and every week pertains to new issue releases, the monthly buyers that the market has to accommodate have truly reached such high that others may not have expected.

It would come as no surprise that comic book stores would become a traffic hotspot this month and the coming following months.

Maybe even the store owners and industry professionals would have never imagined such an unexpected influx. All the 4 titles that I have already introduced are proving to be quite a positive abnormality in their amplificative coordination.

Their unexpected effects sped up a lot of things but it is all for the better of the plans that I has for the future.

Now, RoboCop would not be the Terminator trend follower as RoboCop started a trend of its own.

Overall, RoboCop is just good news all-around, and the jangly fate that its original run had, is now rectified.

Maybe even the un-remembered original creators hadn't had a clue as to how a much impressive and thought-provoking story similar to theirs has wowed the market.

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