Do they pay themselves with investor money or with company profits? Do they sell their shares to get liquidity?
Or is it a huge misconception that startup founders are rich before IPO/acquirement and startup founders are actually extremely poor during the first few years of startups?
With a lifestyle business, you're your own boss and can set your own terms. There are tons of small businesses with CEO's making low seven figure salaries. These typically do not grow fast because the owners pay themselves rather than reinvest into the business. Of course the potential maximum payout of a VC-backed business is also exponentially higher than that of a lifestyle business, so pick your tradeoff.
Your VC will be very unhappy if you overtly cash out, and you can be subject to a minority-shareholder lawsuit if you stop reinvesting and direct 100% of the profit into your own pockets, and it is tax-inefficient to direct most of your profit as salary instead of long-term capital gains (which in the US are taxed lower than regular income) but nothing stops a founder from making their salary be $1MM a year or whatever.
When a company gets to series A/B, VCs are incentivized to give founders enough money so they can focus solely on the company. From what I've seen, they give you enough money to be the poorest kind of rich (say, 1-5M depending on the raise). This keeps you hungry, arguably a bit more than before, as you now have peers who have net worths in the 10s-100s millions.
Sometimes they're allowed to sell some stock during later funding rounds. Investors realized that when founders have to make all-or-nothing decisions, they're likely to sell for lower but certain amounts, but letting founders sell a small percentage of their equity for millions means the founders are more likely to try to get the company to be worth billions.
Sometimes they can take out loans against their equity. Now they have millions in cash, and can go buy homes and cars and stuff. I'm not sure what happens if the startup goes under though!
What profits?