The value depends on the exact type of coin. Your question is too vague to answer. Post a new question with the coin's date, denomination, and condition.
A few coins. Not worth the trouble, really. I would do the quests for the fun of it, mainly, and for the honor of having a certain amount of quest points.A few coins. Not worth the trouble, really. I would do the quests for the fun of it, mainly, and for the honor of having a certain amount of quest points.A few coins. Not worth the trouble, really. I would do the quests for the fun of it, mainly, and for the honor of having a certain amount of quest points.A few coins. Not worth the trouble, really. I would do the quests for the fun of it, mainly, and for the honor of having a certain amount of quest points.
The yellow coins are worth 1, the red coins are worth 2, and the blue coins are worth 3.
No, not from a bank unless it is the current years issue. If you want specifically dated coins, you could try your luck with a coin dealer.
Some Russian coins of that era are extremely collectible, particularly the silver ones. Bills are as well. Book value would depend on exactly what you have, and on its condition. Ultimately coins/bills are worth what somebody is willing to pay for them. For more desirable items you can feel fairly sure of getting approximately book value on eBay. Good pictures help tremendously on eBay.
They are bullion coins and are worth only what the metals they are composed of are worth.
The silver dollar Constitution coins are worth about $7.00 apiece. The gold $5 Constitution coins are worth about $100.00 apiece.
Now its 100 coins and silver is worth 200 coins.
It depends on what coins they are.
Some coins sell in the millions.
Coins in proof sets are generally worth a bit more than coins used in general circulation.
How much ancient coins are worth depends on where they are from and in what condition they are. It also depends on how rare they are.
The brass $1 presidential dollar coins are only worth $1.