Its a well known fact that the Joker is totally fixated on Batman as he sees himself as Batman's ideal inverse who finishes the Dark Knight similarly however much Batman finishes him. While that might be the situation in later DC congruity, it wasn't dependably as the Joker's earliest days as the Caped Crusader's chief adversary demonstrated that he was fixated on one thing much more than Batman.
The Joker is something of a mystery in DC Comics as he has never had a strong history and doesn't utilize a mysterious personality like most other DC antagonists. All things considered, the Joker is apparently a vast power of disorder that has been released upon the Earth as he thinks often about just spreading confusion any place he proceeds to can apparently never be crushed regardless of being a simple human. The Joker is hopeless, deceitful, and absolutely poisonous to anybody that approaches him-with Joker's treatment of Harley Quinn as the ideal illustration of his repulsiveness. As his personality turned out to be more evolved in DC Comics, his apathetic agnosticism kept on sparkling brilliantly and his longing for cash and power diminished enormously as he demonstrated that he simply at any point needed to ruin his general surroundings with Batman going about as his 'white whale,' in a manner of speaking. In any case, upon his presentation, the Joker was just a splendid criminal who wouldn't hesitate to perpetrate murder to get what he was genuinely fixated on.
In Batman #1 by Bill Finger and Bob Kane, the Joker makes his terrible presentation by declaring over the radio that he plans to kill various individuals at explicit times and take their important gems and precious stones. While Batman ultimately stops Joker, the Clown Prince of Crime is fruitful in ransacking the greater part of his as of late departed targets. Later that issue when he breaks out of jail, the Joker gets right the last known point of interest and starts taking rubies and diamonds from individuals he is likewise killing. Then, in the following issue after the Joker is assumed dead, the miscreant gets back to by and by take important gems, and a couple of issues later in Batman #7, he makes an entire posse of programmed thugs to take significantly more significant diamonds.
Joker wasn't as fixated on Batman as fans naturally suspect.
In light of his earliest wrongdoings, as well as how he saw Batman at that point, it appears to be like the Joker was initially much more fixated on taking significant gems, precious stones, and diamonds than he was with the Dark Knight himself. While this all could be seen as a game Joker plays with Batman, that doesn't appear to be the situation to some extent in these previous issues. The Joker believes nothing should do with Batman when the legend plunges in to stop him, and the Joker attempts to kill him after gathering him so he can return to gathering the rubies and diamonds that are so valuable to him.
The Joker taking those resources apparently provided him with a feeling of satisfaction and predominance over Gotham's police force, so getting them no matter what was his solitary mission. At the point when Batman reached out, in any case, he messed up the Joker's pleasant which made the Clown Prince of Crime really disdain the Caped Crusader as Batman kept the Joker from his awards. While the Joker ultimately developed to cherish Batman (in a debilitated and contorted kind of way) he initially needed just to be freed of the Dark Knight so he could zero in on his actual fixation: taking significant gems totally free from everybody's noses.