A friend of mine was standing next to a yellow Lamborghini and said to his friend next to him, "who buys a yellow Lamborghini?" He didn't realize that the owner was in the car with the window down and heard him. The owner stepped out and scowled at him. -It was Michael Jordan. My bet is that he confirms your theory.
I had forgotten facebook had an 'about me' section so I figured it had been long enough since I wrote mine that I could objectively draw conclusions from it about myself ... only apparently I never wrote one in the first place. But I'm extremely narcissistic. So I'm very skeptical of this article, especially because they seem to be calling 'narcissism' what I would call 'the human need for affirmation', a la:The study, which found that people higher in narcissism were more active on Facebook, points out that you tend to encounter “identity statements” on social networks more than you would in real life. When you’re introduced to someone in person, it’s unlikely that they’ll bust out with a pithy sound bite that attempts to sum up all that they are and all they hope to be, but people do that in their Twitter bio or Facebook “About Me” section all the time.
“As you play, your character advances by gaining experience points, ‘leveling-up’ from one level to the next while collecting valuables and weapons and becoming wealthier and stronger,” the study reads. “In this social setting, excellent players receive the recognition and attention of others, and gain power and status.”