[[HayateTheCombatButler http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screwtherulesIhavemoney.png]]
[[caption-width:223:Allow me to present my [[BriefcaseFullOfMoney counter-argument]]...]]
-->'''Impunity,''' ''n.''
---> ''Wealth.''
-->-- AmbroseBierce, ''[=~The Devil's Dictionary~=]''
Let's face it. Life sucks, especially when you don't have much money to your name. This goes double in the world of fiction, where [[RichBitch those that have money]] always try to find ways to make things miserable for those who don't. Such things as ThePowerOfLove and ThePowerOfFriendship generally have no effect on them. As long as they have money, [[VillainWithGoodPublicity they can do anything]]... even [[DevilInPlainSight get away with murder.]] Or BuyThemOff for whatever evil deeds you did commit.
See also CorruptCorporateExecutive, ScrewTheRulesIHavePlot and MrViceGuy. Contrast MiserAdvisor, who doesn't have the money, but "screws the rules" in order to get it. A wealthy person who adopts this attitude has a greater chance of becoming a KarmaHoudini than any poor person (a fact which, sadly, [[TruthInTelevision isn't limited to fiction]]).
Sometimes means a character is part of the {{Fiction 500}}.
The [[EvilCounterpart Lawful Counterpart]] to this trope is ScrewTheMoneyIHaveRules. See also IThoughtItWasForbidden.
----
!!Examples
[[foldercontrol]]
[[folder: Anime and Manga ]]
* Seto Kaiba from ''{{Yu-Gi-Oh}}!'' got away with a ''lot'' because of his wealth. The trope name comes from a line in the first episode of the GagDub ''{{Yu-Gi-Oh The Abridged Series}}'', which parodied this. In fact, both the line and the concept are running jokes throughout the (abridged) series.
-->'''Yugi''': Wait a minute; did you just summon a bunch of monsters in one turn?
-->'''Kaiba''': Yeah, so?
-->'''Yugi''': That's against the rules, isn't it?
-->'''Kaiba''': Screw the rules, I have money!
** The English dub has a line very close to this during a duel when Kaiba plans to use Chaos Emperor Dragon's special ability:
--->'''Siegfried''': There's one problem -- you need to give up 1,000 of your Life Points first, and you can't afford that now.
--->'''Kaiba''': There's nothing I can't afford. (plays ''[[TheMagicPokerEquation Emergency Provisions]]'')
** Pegasus and other characters use this trope as well.
* Giovanni from ''{{Pokemon}}'' gets away with this, so much so that he can personally come down to the police station and bail out Team Rocket members. In the ''Pokemon Adventures'' manga, even more so after the Saffron City incident.
** In the games, it's debatable since he's gone into hiding after Pokemon Red, Blue, and Yellow.
* Shirogane Ryou and Aizawa Minto from ''TokyoMewMew'' are both obscenely rich, and love nothing more than to tick off Ichigo by showing off their wealth. However, they aren't [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold all that bad]].
* Shutaro Mendou in ''UruseiYatsura''.
** And his CaptainErsatz, Rival-san Lendo, in ''NinjaHighSchool''.
* The Kunos from ''[[RanmaOneHalf Ranma 1/2]]'' are often depicted this way by {{fanon}}, although objectively other characters in the series do just as bad with fewer resources.
** Sometimes the Kunos ''really'' are this way. After steadfastly rejecting to sell a Phoenix Egg to Kuno, on the basis that it bears a terrible secret and the Phoenix Sword it bestows is too dangerous to exist, the owner of an antiques store quickly folds and sells the egg when slapped with a wad of bills.
* Kazuharu Fukuyama from ''GirlsBravo'', mostly to be an antagonist to the milksopy but ambivalent Yukinari.
* Likewise Kentaro in ''LoveHina'', who actually loses most of his money and becomes a [[PluckyComicRelief comic relief gag character]].
* Halekulani from ''BoboboboBobobo'' might be a parody of this. As a master of "Gorgeous Shinken" ("Fist of Gorgeous"), for him, money is quite literally power; his energy attacks are rated by their dollar value, and he can increase his strength by absorbing all the profits from the amusement park he owns. One of his more dangerous attacks actually turns his opponents into coins.
* In ''Boys Over Flowers'' (''HanaYoriDango''), the F4 is allowed to do whatever they want at school, including harassing students they [[strike:hate]] [[strike:dislike]] haven't found a reason to like, just because their families donate the most money to the school. Later on, it's learned that Domyoji got away with beating a guy until his organs ruptured due to his family paying off the school and the boy's family. And later still, Domyoji's mother Kaede attempts to pay Tsukushi's family hundreds of thousands of dollars just to keep Tsukushi from dating her son.
* This trope can be attributed to ''HayateTheCombatButler'''s Mask the Money (really Nagi wearing a PaperThinDisguise), who often solves her problems with her vast riches (and everything else with [[BattleButler Hayate]]).
** The {{Yakuza}} chasing Hayate prior to this point do an inversion of this, "She has money, obey the rules." When one less-than-intelligent member asks why they don't kill everyone anyways, aren't they {{Card Carrying Villain}}s? His smarter co-worker smacks him and says ''No'', the Yakuza leaves people who do pay them alone. That's the point.
* Shinzen Tennozou, among several other ''SpeedGrapher'' characters.
* A recurrent theme in ''AshitaNoNadja'', where lots of rich people are portrayed this way.
* Subverted with Hokuto of ''CromartieHighSchool'', who transferred to Cromartie planning to indimidating everyone by threatening to get them expelled by his father, chairman of the school board... but he actually transferred to ''the wrong school''. Not only is his father not the head of the school board, it's a municipal school and thus ''doesn't even have one''.
* The Black Black Club from ''YuYuHakusho'' ''runs'' on this trope. It reaches a peak in [[TournamentArc The Dark Tournament's]] third round, which one guy turns into his own little Screw-the-rules fest.
** And then, ironically, when the other members of the club use ''their'' money to screw with the rules further, [[EvenEvilHasStandards he has them all killed]].
* Kakuzu from ''{{Naruto}}'' is shown to present this argument to Hidan when they go to capture a monk for a bounty. Hidan tells Kakuzu that killing a monk is a one-way ticket to hell, to which Kakuzu replies that even hell is run on money, and that he'll be fine.
* Washizu from ''{{Akagi}}'' is able to get away with several murders, though it causes him some inconvenience. The cop Yasuoka figures it's a better idea to pit him against Akagi in a high-stakes game of mahjong rather than trying to confront him by legal means.
* ...And then the [[BigBad "Chairman"]] from ''{{Kaiji}}'' kicks it up a notch, having things like a cruise ship and a hotel to use as private gambling venues, with people disappearing or getting killed at them seemingly posing no problem.
* ''AiKora'' has Ayame Yatsuhashi, who constantly does this, mostly in [[StalkerWithACrush her efforts to get into Maeda's pants.]]
* Pretty much the entire thing that drives the plot for ''LiarGame''. The elaborate organization manages to get away with forcing billion dollar debts on people simply because it's so rich and powerful (though it also helps that none of the people bothered going to actual, ''real'' lawyers).
* In ''FullMetalPanic'', Sousuke is allowed to violate so many laws it's not even funny while attending school. He points loaded guns at people (and sometimes even shoots at them), places landmines and bombs everywhere, destroys people's private property without remorse, makes threats filled with killer intent... all of this is ignored by the head of the school. Why? Because Mithril makes HUGE donations to her for allowing Sousuke to attend school.
* ''EdenOfTheEast'' features several characters with ludicrously large cash reserves and a concierge who helps them do whatever they want with it, including [[spoiler:bribing the Prime Minister, serial murder, launching missiles at Japan, and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking building a nice hospital]].]]
** [[spoiler:Bribing the PM only cost 60 yen]].
* In the movie ''[[SpiritedAway Spirited Away]]'', when Chihiro is worried about her parents eating the food of the spirits without permission, her father says he has 'credit cards and cash'. Soon afterwards, [[spoiler:they're turned into pigs]], and Chihiro has to find a way to rescue them.
** Her dad had no real idea of the food's supernatural nature, though; his reasoning wasn't so much "screw the rules" as it was "they can just bill me for the buffet."
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Comic Books ]]
* Wilson "The Kingpin" Fisk from the MarvelUniverse, particularly the UltimateMarvel version.
* The corrupt politician/businessman version of Lex Luthor from TheDCU.
* ''SinCity'''s Yellow Bastard could get away with anything (especially [[RapeAsDrama rape]]) because his father was a US Senator, and the patriarch of an excessively powerful and wealthy family that owns the bulk of Basin City.
** Until Hartigan got ahold of him, the Yellow Bastard got away with ''child'' rape ''and'' murder.
* Odin Quincannon in the comic book ''{{Preacher}}''.
* Also from TheDCU, there's foppish dilettante Most Excellent Superbat, who proudly claims this as his superpower. As he puts it in ''Final Crisis'' #6: "I have the greatest power of all, Mister Miracle. I am so rich, I can do ''anything''."
** Although it's left somewhat ambiguous as to whether he's referring to this (using his money to keep himself out of trouble) or CrimefightingWithCash, as he deliberately modeled his superhero persona on Batman.
*** It's both really he's so rich he ''bought Japan''
* Scrooge [=McDuck=] is well-known for his meanness but when it comes to treasure hunting, it's nearly the opposite. For example, in DonRosa's "Guardians of the Lost Library", it seems that the Library of Alexandria is buried under a modern football stadium. A match is going on and the digging after the library will break it which will be a breach of the rules. But Scrooge just says to the officials: "Okay, then I buy both teams and stadium."
**In an older story by Vicar, when on a trip in the Australian Outback, he gets told the train leaves once a day, and it has already done so today. "My name is Scrooge McDuck *picks a million or two out from his NiceHat* I hereby BUY the whole railroad. A train leaves NOW!" It works!
* In ''{{Nodwick}}'', a group of adventurers encounters a sphinx, who spouts her riddle. The wizard remarks that they're not really all that clever and they just want to get through the dungeon, so he offers her a bribe. She demands the inclusion of a goodie from the titular henchman, who points out in the last panel that the answer to the riddle was "money"... At which point the fighter replies:
-->'''Yeagar:''' Weren't you listening? The answer is '''always''' "money".
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Film ]]
* The Biff Tannen of the alternate universe in ''BackToTheFuture Part II'' killed Marty McFly's father, and then told him that they'd [[DevilInPlainSight never convict him of murder]] because he "owned the police."
** "I own the police" is also attributed to notorious early 20th century gangster Al Capone, thus making this both TruthInTelevision and [[strike:OlderThanTelevision]](TV: 1928. "I own the police": 1929). Ironically, Capone's money (due to tax evasion) is what brought him down.
** It's also strongly implied that the only way he keeps Loraine from leaving him is by threatening to cut off financial support from her children which would land them all in jail.
* The mean, evil banker Mr. Potter from ''ItsAWonderfulLife'', who steals George Bailey's money and goads him towards attempting suicide.
* The end scene of ''Small Soldiers'' is most likely a parody of this.
* The resolution of ''Chinatown'' revolved around this concept. It was alluded to rather blatantly in an old draft of the script, but it was removed at the behest of the director, who felt it was too obvious.
* Darwin and Minerva Mayflower from ''Hudson Hawk''.
* Pick a ''JamesBond'' villain. Any one will do.
* Subverted in {{Titanic}} when Cal Hockley attempts to buy his way into a lifeboat, only to have the money thrown back in his face just before the officer he gave it to commits suicide.
* Played straight many, many times in ''TheDistinguishedGentleman'', a film about a con man turned U.S. Senator. Subverted somewhat unusually in the same film:
-->'''Lobbyist:''' For instance, where are you on sugar price supports?
-->'''Tommy:''' Sugar price supports. Uhh... Where do you think I should be?
-->'''Lobbyist:'' Makes no difference to me. If you're for 'em, I got money for you from my sugar producers in Louisiana and Hawaii. If you're against 'em, I got money for you from the candy manufacturers.
-->'''Tommy:''' You pick.
-->'''Lobbyist:''' Let's put you down as for. Now what about putting limits on malpractice awards?
-->'''Tommy:''' You tell me.
-->'''Lobbyist:''' Well, if you're for 'em, I got money from the doctors and insurance companies. If you're against 'em, I got money from the trial lawyers. Tell you what, let's say against.
-->[...]
-->'''Tommy:''' Terry, tell me something. With all this money coming in from both sides, how does anything ever get done?
-->'''Lobbyist:''' It doesn't! That's the genius of the system!
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Literature ]]
* Lucius Malfoy from ''HarryPotter'' weaseled out of many problems thanks to his wealth and social position.
** [[OlderThanTheyThink Before Lucius,]] there was [[TomBrownsSchooldays Flashman,]] though eventually his behavior was too out of control for even his family connections to save him.
* In LoisMcMasterBujold's VorkosiganSaga, there is an entire planet, Jackson's Whole, where any and all rules of the rest of the galaxy will be ignored for the right sum.
--> "An arrest order has been purchased for you. It charges you with the murder of Sydney Liga. Do you wish to outbid?"
** Unless it personally offends one of the ruling oligarchs to the point where he'd rather take it out of your hide even if doing so hurts his profits, whereupon ''no'' amount of money can save you. Then again, those oligarchs rule precisely because they're the richest and most unscrupulous bastards in town...
*Phileas Fogg in ''Jules Verne's Around The World in 80 Days'' had a habit of throwing large volumes of money at his problems, at one point going so far as to hijack a ship and they buy it and its cargo from its owner en route to Ireland. The original owner got the hull back in the end.
* Let's face it. [[TheCountOfMonteCristo Edmond Dantes]], {{Determinator}} or not, wouldn't have gotten far into his elaborate schemes for revenge without his eleventy billion francs. He bribed a ''pope''. (Although maybe that was just TruthInTelevision for the period?)
* {{Artemis Fowl}} loves this trope. Not surprising, considering that the title character is a {{True Neutral}} {{Teen Genius}} with his entire family's fortune at his disposal.
**To wit: "We have two options; legal, and illegal [...] Illegal is faster."
* Herman di Portola Bliss of the mystery novel ''Impossible Bliss'' is highly eccentric and even more obnoxious. Though he's been arrested numerous times in his Santa Barbara hometown, he's never faced charges in court, because he's the last scion of the family that founded (and still owns much of) the town.
* The tituler character of TheGreatGatsby earns his fortune for the sole reason to get with Daisy. He even thinks that he could reverse five years just because.
** [[spoiler:But, of course, it's a subversion, given how epically Gatsby fails.]]
* Julia Evans, the young billionairess in the "Greg Mandell" sci-fi series by Peter F. Hamilton. Granted, she lives in a world virtually owned by multinationals, but even a CorruptCorporateExecutive she has a grudge against is shocked when she buys the controlling interest in a ''Swiss bank'' in order to expose his scheme to steal from her corporation.
* Flinx, of the ''HumanxCommonwealth'' series, is an AntiHero user of this trope, thanks to having some SufficientlyAdvancedAliens rig his bank account (as a favor). He mainly uses it to bribe his way around the Commonwealth, but loses some of that advantage after coming to the attention of the peaceforcers on Terra in ''Reunion''. It's also blatantly subverted in ''Flinx Transcendent'', where passing counterfeit [=AAnn=] currency on Blasusarr is what blows his cover.
* Subverted, inverted, ''and'' played straight in ''{{Atlas Shrugged}}''. Inverted in that the strikers are punished ''because'' they make money; subverted when Hank's Rearden's money fails to protect him during his divorce trial; played straight when Rearden is allowed to buy resources and sell his products how he wishes, despite legally binding orders to the contrary.
* Subverted hard in Robert Aspirin's ''PhulesCompany'' books; and one of the few examples of the trope being consistently employed effectively on the side of good. Most of the time, it's the titular Williard Phule, aka Captain Jester, using his vast wealth to foil [[ObstructiveBureaucrat Obstructive Bureaucrats]] who have the letter, if not the spirit, of the law on their side.
* Used in one of the books in ''The Once and Future King'' series. Mordred argues with Arthur that their judicial system - two champions jousting, on behalf of the defendant and persecution - was unfair since it was more of a battle of muscles. Arthur pointed out that the law allowed for each party to hire whomever they liked to be their champion and pointed out that if they switched to using lawyers it would just be the same (each party could hire whichever lawyer they thought would best save their bacon). He finishes by pointing out that in the judicial system, whoever has the most money will most likely win.
* Lady Schrapnell, the UpperClassTwit funding projects for Oxford's time travel department in ToSayNothingOfTheDog, puts the staff through a hell of a lot of abuse, which they only put up with because they really need those funds. One of her mantras is "rules are meant to be broken", which the department heads keep fruitlessly trying to explain to her doesn't work for the laws of physics.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Live Action TV ]]
* ''LawAndOrder'' often has these characters as defendants, as they usually hire the best lawyers; a {{Recurrer}} named Arthur [[PunnyName Gold]] putting in an appearance is a dead giveaway. If anyone's likely to literally get away with murder on these shows, it's them.
** Gold seems to have been replaced as the go-to shyster by [[LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit SVU's]] Lionel Granger.
* Edward Vogler in Season 1 of ''{{House}}'' starts running the hospital like an EvilOverlord, making calls about things like a dying cancer patient getting a C-Section, purely because he can threaten to withdraw a 100 million dollar donation if everybody doesn't say "How high?" whenever he says "Jump!"
** [[spoiler:Eventually subverted when he begins attempting to pick off board members who stand up to him; the rest of the board finally says, effectively, "Screw your money, we're going home."]]
* Stephanie Forrester from ''{{the Bold and the Beautiful}}''. She has gotten away with accomplice to rape, harbouring a fugitive and accomplice-after-the-fact to murder. Among other things.
* Subversion: Much of ''ArrestedDevelopment'' centers around the Bluth family learning to (read: not being able to) deal with the fact that they can no longer screw the rules now that they have no money.
* Subversion: Future show ''The Philanthropist'' stars a guy who has money and wants to give it away to good causes in very dangerous areas... ''[[HonorBeforeReason personally.]]'' "Screw the rules, I'm giving you money!"?
* Q from ''StarTrek''. More like Screw The Rules, I'm Omnipotent, but the analogy still works.
** Let's face it, despite their lack of actual money, TheFederation does this too. With all their vast resources they can do pretty much whatever they want.
* Subverted with Jonas Hodges of season 7 of ''[[TwentyFour 24]]''. As the wealthy head of a government contract army, it is assumed he's doing what he's doing to ensure his company gets contracts. It's revealed that he actually feels he's providing a service and protecting the country. The money is actually the last thing on his mind.
* Much of the cast of ''{{Dallas}}'' or ''{{Dynasty}}''.
*{{Firefly}} : Simon manages to do both at the same time. He gives up his fortune to save River thereby saying ScrewTheMoneyIHaveRules. He also uses his money to rescue River in defiance of the law, thereby saying ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney.
* Becomes a plot point in ''GossipGirl'' where Dan automatically assumes everyone on the UES has this attitude, which causes problems in his relationship with Serena. Has been played straight, or at least been attempted to, on a few occasions, yet not nearly as often as one might expect.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Professional Wrestling ]]
* This was [[{{WWE}} WWF]] wrestler "The Million Dollar Man" Ted [=DiBiase=]'s whole character, right down to attempting to buy the WWF World Heavyweight Championship from Hulk Hogan for one million dollars when he couldn't win it in a match (no matter how much he cheated), and then using the money to hire Andre the Giant to get it for him when Hulk refused to sell. Once that failed, he simply made his own championship belt. With diamonds. And blackjack. And hookers. [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking OK, maybe not blackjack]]. His CatchPhrase was, "Everybody's got a price!"
** One of {{Professional Wrestling}}'s oldest ones in the book: since (in most wrestling organizations) the champion retains through an indecisive finish, and a disqualification is defined as indecisive, many {{heel}}s holding the belt will get themselves disqualified intentionally during a match in order to keep their status as champion, thus leading to the variant: "Screw the rules, I have a title!" Fans often refer to this as a "Honky Tonk Finish", after the [[{{WWE}} WWF]] wrestler The Honky Tonk Man, who built up a 15-month reign as Intercontinental Champion by doing this repeatedly.
** John Bradshaw Layfield, a current {{WWE}} wrestler and a RealLife self-made millionaire, has essentially become an {{Expy}} of the Million Dollar Man, with additional reactionary, racist and jingoistic overtones. Imagine putting Lex Luthor, David Duke, J.R. Ewing and Bill O'Reilly in a blender, and you'll have JBL.
* Tangentially related: In season 3 of ''[[ThumbWrestlingFederation TWF]]'', Bucks Gazillion used these types of tactics to win the title and then took over the [[{{Heel}} Sinistras]]. Season 4 has just about every match ending with Bucks playing some dirty trick to help the Sinistra defeat the [[{{Face}} Dextera]].
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Tabletop Games ]]
*In ''Unknown Armies'', [[spoiler: plutomancers can utilize money to bend the rules of anything including forcing people to shoot themselves, summoning any object, and dictating global economies]]
*In Warhammer, the Ogre Kingdoms special character Greasus Gooldtooth has three special rules dedicated to just how much money he has. These include one that has nearby friendly units fight all the harder in hopes of getting a higher pay, and one that allows him to bribe enemy units into not fighting for a turn.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Theatre ]]
* In the SickSadWorld of the Weill/Brecht opera ''The Rise and Fall of the City Mahagonny'', Jimmy Mahoney is sentenced to death for the [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotHeinous most heinous and foul crime]] of not paying his bar tab. Too bad he didn't have any money. If he'd had enough to bribe the judge, he could have gotten away with murder in cold blood, like the man who was tried just before him.
** If he had money, he would have paid his bar tab!
* Used in ''{{Urinetown}}: The Musical''.
-->Cladwell: It wasn't just cash, Ms. Pennywise. It was an ''awful '''lot''' ''of cash.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Video Games ]]
* Colin from the ''[[NintendoWars Advance Wars]]'' games has this as his [[LimitBreak CO Super Power]]. By hoarding up loads and loads of money, it's possible for even his weakest infantry unit to [[DeathOfAThousandCuts wipe out an enemy Neotank in one shot.]] In ''Advance Wars: Dual Strike'', his sister, Sasha, has a CO Power (Market Crash) that pretty much comes as close to screwing the rules as any CO Power in the game by actually lowering the enemy's CO Power meter by an amount decided by how much money you have.
** Also, neither of these CO powers use up the money that they run on, so you can use them repeatedly, each time the effects thereof growing stronger (provided you don't spend more money on a turn than the next one will replace).
** Just to make Colin's power even scarier, bear in mind that he has a 20% price cut on all his troops at the expense of some combat power. So he can get his neotanks for only a little more than his enemy is buying their heavy tanks. ZergRush is scary enough, but it becomes ''really'' scary when the "Zerglings" are doing 300% of your health in damage.
* The "Montana Legal" upgrade in ''{{Scarface}}: The World is Yours'' slows police response times to half the pre-upgrade speed, giving Tony Montana some much-needed time to carry out his questionable deeds. Interestingly, in the original film, it was attempting to evade tax for his considerable profits that started Tony's downfall.
* CEO Nwabudike Morgan from ''SidMeiersAlphaCentauri''. His only goal is to conquer the Fiction500 rankings... but what if a law prevents him from doing so? No sweat! He just pays his lobby groups and bribes the local legislators to have it changed.
** And one of the winning conditions for the game is to take over the global economy.
* ''ResidentEvil 4''. The rocket launcher. Able to OneHitKill ''anything in the game''. The downside? It's expensive (thus this trope), has only one use, and takes up an assload of inventory space until you do use it. Generally used to skip the player's personal [[ThatOneBoss One Boss]].
** And then you unlock and buy the Infinite Launcher, which is more expensive but takes up no more space. [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin You can guess how many shots you get with it...]]
* The ''Fugger 2'' lets you play a merchant in the 17th century who slowly increases their influence over the country. From controlling the courts over rewriting the law to building up an army of robbers (and even laying siege to cities), nothing is impossible as long as you can pay.
* It is possible to completely avoid the fight with Mephistopheles at the end of ''{{Neverwinter Nights}}: Hordes of the Underdark'' and get different endings by obtaining knowledge of his TrueName. The one person who can tell it to you will give it up for the small fee of 600,000 gold pieces.
** It sounds big, but you can definitely scrounge up more than that over the course of the game without cheating.
* In ''FinalFantasyX'' not only can you bribe monsters (including some bosses) into leaving you alone, but also into giving you items.
** And then there's the Aeon Yojimbo who you recruit by haggling an astronomic ammount of money and the damage of whose attacks are based on how much money you pay him before each attack. He can even kill any enemy (even bosses) in one hit if you pay him enough (though the amount scales with how powerful the enemy is, of course).
*** Slight subversion in that case, choosing the correct conversation option when you recruit him means he'll still pull out his one hit kill even when you only pay him 1 gil, so maxing out his speed makes him a bit of a game breaker.
* Armacham corporation in {{FEAR}}
* [[RatchetAndClank Ratchet]] generally only survives whatever it is he's gotten involved with because he can buy [[{{BFG}} guns significantly larger than himself]].
* In ''Ocarina of Time'', the player can bribe a guard with ten rupees to let them sneak into Hyrule Castle. A bit pointless as there is a vine Link can climb up for free, but what the hey?
* [[FinalFantasyVII President Shinra's]] view on life:
-->'''These days, all it takes for your dreams to come true is money and power.'''
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Web Original]]
* Benjamin Palmer of ''BrokenSaints'' fame wouldn't be a CorruptCorporateExecutive if he didn't think himself above the law.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Web Comics]]
* Parodied in [[http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=1333#comic this]] SaturdayMorningBreakfastCereal strip.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Western Animation ]]
* C. Montgomery Burns, [[TheSimpsons Springfield's]] resident centenarian and lone plutocrat, once tried to block out the sun just to squeeze more money out of the townsfolk (since he owns the town's only power company), shrugs off serious allegations and charges with money and bribes, but still indulges in that joyful pastime of [[KickTheDog stealing candy from babies]], with both disastrous results and [[HilarityEnsues hilarious consequences.]]
* Princess Morbucks from ''The {{Powerpuff Girls}}''. "I have the most powerful power there is! Cold, hard cash!"
* Remy Buxaplenty on ''TheFairlyOddparents''. The fact that [[WriterOnBoard Butch Hartman]] was picked on by rich kids in high school has ''absolutely nothing'' to do with the character's horribly exaggerated portrayal, really.
** Timmy, meanwhile, may have an infinite amount of magical wishes at his fingertips, but he actually ''doesn't'' have infinite magical wealth at his fingertips, as shown in one episode where he wishes for a large sum of money so he can get tickets to a concert, only to find out that it's against the rules- the fairies [[ShownTheirWork did their research]], and don't want to cause too much inflation.
*Montana Max from ''TinyToonAdventures''. He uses his vast wealth to push the other characters around, and owns heavily polluting industries that make inane things like ice cream spoons and portable holes.
* ''TheBoondocks'' has Ed Wuncler III, whose father owns everything in town and will never be arrested or prosecuted for anything. Riley even said "you're lucky your granddad owns the police" after a badly botched bank robbery. Ed's partner Gin Rummy denied it works that way, and claimed they got away with it "because I am a criminal mastermind"... [[HypocriticalHumor right before]] a cop comes by ''to return Ed's wallet from the scene of the crime''.
** His grandfather Ed Sr. isn't much better. In one episode, he converts a health food restaurant into a soul food restaurant (firing all the employees except the illegal Mexicans in the process) in order to drive down property values in the area and convince the city to sell him a public park. In another episode, he uses a pony (which may not actually ever have existed) as leverage to perform a hostile takeover of Jazmine's lemonade stand.
* Vlad Masters from ''DannyPhantom'' fits this trope. In fact, about the only thing he can't buy is the Green Bay Packers.
** And Maddie. Can't forget that.
*** Or Danny. He can't buy Danny's love (No, not [[FoeYay THAT kind of love]], sorry Vlad/Danny shippers) either.
* David Xanatos of ''{{Gargoyles}}''. His introduction to viewers included the phrase "Pay a man enough and he'll walk barefoot into hell." The guy owns everything, all the shiny toys, all the best lawyers, everything. A fan joke is that Xanatos is so rich, he could afford to pay all the people necessary to say "hell" in a children's cartoon series. A DISNEY children's cartoon series no less. For the record, the lack of parental guardians and other outrage was [[XanatosGambit all part of his plan]].
**Not to mention having ''eleven'' tropes named after him. Now that's cash.
**However, the part of his character development is the realization that not everything can be solved by money.
* In ''Hercules: The Animated Series'', the king of {{Atlantis}}, Croesus, bribes Hades and the Fates to prevent losses following a prophecy involving his city sinking. In the end, Atlantis sinks, complete with Hades delivering his check back, allegating "your bank went under". Another episode has Adonis delivering checks to all before him in a queue to get attended quickly - ''three times''!
* There was an episode of ''DuckTales'' in which a [[YourWorstNightmare nightmare version]] of the boys' Uncle Scrooge tells them, "I'm RICH! I can do ANYTHING!!"
* The main characters of ''{{Metalocalypse}}'' have this in its ultimate incarnation: "Screw the rules, the world economy would fail without us!" One episode also featured a movie producer rich enough to push even Dethklok around.
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