You'll have to clean up Hades' 'temple' from the graffiti.
To get the money to give to Hercules in Poptropica's Mythology Island, you need to complete tasks for characters around the island to earn drachmas. This includes helping the villagers, completing challenges, and collecting items to trade for money. Keep exploring and interacting with characters to gather enough drachmas to give to Hercules.
You are probably referring to a 50 Drachmas coin from Greece.
There is exactly ONE drachma to be earned on the island. If you go to the temple of Hades (right of Temple of Muses), the worker will pay you ONE drachma to clean all of the graffiti off the outside of the temple. This is all you can earn, and you need it when climbing Mount Olympus at the end of the island quest.
In the Poptropica island "Mythology," a drachma is a Greek currency that can be used to purchase items or unlock paths within the game. Players can collect drachma coins by completing tasks or defeating enemies throughout the island.
In Mythology Island on Poptropica, you will need to use a golden apple as an offering on the altar to guide your path through the Minotaur's labyrinth. This golden apple is found in the Garden of the Sphinx.
You can't
You don't need to get the 9 drachmas; he lowers the price and you have to do the other challenges first you must go to Olympus village where you must speak to Athena who will get Hercules to help you move the rock in front of Hades' throne room. :)
To get the money to give to Hercules in Poptropica's Mythology Island, you need to complete tasks for characters around the island to earn drachmas. This includes helping the villagers, completing challenges, and collecting items to trade for money. Keep exploring and interacting with characters to gather enough drachmas to give to Hercules.
75 drachmas
20,000 drachmas = 77.32 USD
All citizens were paid with 50 drachmas.
As a unit of currency in Greece until the Euro was introduced, Drachmas is a noun
You don't. You don't need the autograph and you can't get the nine drachmas.
Greece
Cross
Golden drachmas
Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.