Legacy:Coin

From Ring of Brodgar
Revision as of 22:54, 12 September 2015 by RobBot (talk | contribs) (Bot: Adding {{OutdatedPage}})
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Wiki-content.png

Legacy Haven & Hearth page.
"The RoB Wiki currently hosts information for both the current Haven & Hearth world as well as the legacy server. Please be aware that information relating to legacy should be found on pages with "legacy" in the name. While our editors have done their best to get things sorted, please be aware there may be some pages that haven't been moved properly and may still be flagged that the information is legacy and may not apply to the current world."

Just in case. There is a Legacy specific discussion page.
Coin
Legacy-Coin.png
Vital statistics
Size 1 x 1
Stockpile Coins (50)
Skill(s) RequiredSpecific needed skills.<br>The default skills every hearthling starts off with, Oral Tradition, Primitive Tools & Wilderness Survival), are ignored. Basic Mechanics
Object(s) Required Bar of Cast Iron, Bar of Wrought Iron, Bar of Steel, Bar of Silver, Bar of Gold, Bar of Bronze, Bar of Copper, Bar of Tin, Coinpress
Go to Objects

Icon keyboard.pngCraft > Metal Working > Coins

How to Acquire

Using one bar of any metal with a coinpress will produce 100 coins with a quality level equal to that of the bar used to make them. A stack of 100 coins can be reverted back to a bar of the respective metal by melting them in a finery forge. In addition, stacks of exactly 10 coins may be melted down to create a nugget of metal. Coins are not required to trade, but they can be used to purchase items from player-built Vending Stands. The value of any coin can depend heavily on who you are trading with and what they value the metal content at, as well as the quality of the metal used to make the coin.

Stacks of coins can be Split into two stacks by right-clicking the pile of coins, and specifying how many coins to remove.


Ask for removal

This section below needs to be reworked/removed. Outdated with world 4 and how easy it is to find metals.

However due to the difficulty of setting up and maintaining vending stands, coupled with the high cost of the materials required to make a coinpress (one bar of steel, two wrought and three cast), coins are often considered to be not worth the effort to make; metals are often bought and sold in bar form or in the shape of finished goods, which are then traded for other items in person.