Taking Matters into own hands

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The companies that worked on the Dunphy franchise costumes just didn't have much motivation and drive to earn much money from it.

The fact that they aren't complaining much to Dunphy Comics is that they were already expecting themselves to only earn as minuscule as possible.

In their minds, a comic book boom could never hope to catch up to established companies and even the ultra-popular apparel from popular films.

In the scheduled Halloween costume release, how could Dunphy costumes even hold up to skeletons, pumpkins, ghosts, pirates, and other established Halloween costume staples.

These outsourced companies were only looking for diversifying their selection and nothing more.

Their collective mindsets could already be deduced from the shoddy products they've been retailing to costume stores. The Goku blue martial gi was the most viable while the rest were just undesirable flops.

The most simple design was clearly the easiest to recognize and the easiest for the costume departments to make.

The rest of the Dunphy characters in the selection roster are just way too otherworldly and complexly designed. Their designs drew the eyes of the readers in pages and panels of comic books but are hard to make happen in the real world.

The other addition to these costume complications is that costumes themselves are a small market to tap into. Halloween is the costume season but it stops there.

The costume companies could not be blamed for not having a rising and abundant market to sell their products toward.

I understood that as well as it is still the 1970s and not 2010s when the nerds of Comic-Con and anime otaku would bring an insurgence to the costume industry... they even took it as far towards the shirt industry with Youtube Merch and Japan being the biggest initiators.

The era still isn't right but at least the Dunphy franchise have a much better viewpoint on how to tackle the industry.

I have already planned to pull out the authorizations after the contracts expire and plan to handle the costume industry along with the peripherals that need better overseeing as well.

I'm in full mood to start Comic- con and bring American otaku insurgency much ahead in time to open up new market prospects and lead Dunphy franchise to start sucking most of the prosperity nector on yearly basis. When this insurgency will engulf most of the north america, it will be lead into foreign markets to increase fertility and me and my company will collect the wealth bearing fruits.

Just as Thanos took up his Infinity Gauntlet wanted to get the job done himself because of all the failures of his pawns, I have no choice but to 'Fine... I'll do it myself' as well.

The disappointing costume debut and the low-levelness of the experimentally pawn-like outsource costume companies just aren't cutting it. Since my personal intervention has always worked out exceptionally well, then that wouldn't stop me spearheading another industry venture once again.

If the franchise expansion needed to be done right, then my past-future inspirations and emulations should be enough to trump the 1970s costume industry's stable but small trend.

Of course, that grand clothing and costume ambition has to wait for quite some time as I'm still cooped up with other things.

Dunphy Comics' title expansion is already on standby after all, so there is no need to jump into another Dunphy branded industry as there are other Dunphy brands already in the queue.

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As disappointing as it is to see a disappointing Dunphy experimental venture, a balance has to be ensured for the stability of a business.

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