In Brain Age 2 , the top left coin is 25c , the top right one is 10c, the bottom left one is 5c and the bottom right one (black coin) is 1c.
It's worth what someone is willing to pay for it
they are worth what ever someone is willing to pay for them
Find a coin show in your area, take the coin, and get offers from several different dealers.
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It's worth only what someone is willing to pay for it. A dealer may give you 2 cents, the copper in the coin is worth more even with today's prices. An uncirculated coin is worth about .75 cents.
A handbook on coins is a good guideline but all coin collectors say that a coin is only worth what someone would pay for it.
The intention is to make the coin worth more. See the related link to spot a counterfeit coin.
The plating adds nothing to the value of a dollar coin, unless someone wants it.
No, a coin copy is worth only the value of the materials used to make the coin, the coins themselves have no value and are not legal tender. For example, someone could make a quarter copy out of lead and it wouldn't be worth 25 cents, on the flip-side, someone could make a quarter copy out of silver or gold and it would be worth many times the "face" value.
It means someone had a metal punch and too much time on their hands.
The Apollo 11 commemorative coin is readily available with little demand for it. Therefore it is only worth between $1-$5 but as with any collector item it is worth what someone is willing to pay for it.
The coin is not gold and unless you find someone that wants it, it's face value.