Somehow my 3 year old has about 10 million coins and stars(?) in My Talking Tom 2. Is this normal? My 6 year old is claiming it's "unlimited money" although it's going down when stuff is bought. When I look up unlimited money I see 999.9M not the 10M he has. I have no purchase history on the app store or my credit card and when I try to buy something in the play store it still asks for my password. I know he was watching a lot of ads the other day. I don't play the game so I have no idea what's reasonable. When I tried to open the in game store, there was no coin purchase options in the 3yo tablet, but there was in the 6yo tablet.

THE GHANA Talking Drum Coin Necklace is handcrafted based on an authentic Ghanaian coin with precious metals using the traditional lost-wax casting technique. The design features two traditional talking drums from the Ashanti people Ghana. The drum sounds are part of a codified language that were used to communicate acrossdistances and during community gatherings. The back of the coin features Ghana's national black star. The coin was minted during Ghana's Independence era.


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Please review the attachment for detailed information on the coins that have been recommended for conservation. If grades are not provided, conservation is required for the coin(s) to be encapsulated, otherwise the coin(s) will be returned raw (not encapsulated) and grading fees will still apply.

I've collected and studied coins and their grading standards for over 50 years and, except for sending a few coins to ANACS decades ago, only began submitting some of my (mostly higher value) pieces for grading this year. You really have to be familiar with grading and the habits of the grading service you've chosen regarding what constitutes an impairment if you want to be successful. I can see hairlines from a "cleaning" on the coin in your photo, which I doubt were put there by NCS. The coin probably also had contamination from a PVC flip, which can just look like a slight haze or small spot. In my case I've had more coins that came back with higher grades than I anticipated than lower ones, such as the 1909-S Indian cent I just submitted purchased as a "Fine" in 1989 and which I thought would grade VF 25 or so by today's standards, but which came back from NGC graded XF 40!

Even major dealers who are experienced in grading submissions get some pieces back "details" graded, as Jeff Garrett (former ANA president and prominent dealer) discusses in his recent article for NGC, which you can find at Jeff Garrett: The Art of Rare Coin Submissions | NGC (ngccoin.com) (right click for menu to open). If you've only been a collector for a fairly brief time, you may wish to refrain from submitting uncertified coins until you've become more experienced and knowledgeable about the nuances involved.

Interesting Sandon. I have and intend to keep virtually my entire collection as raw coins or in OGP, except ones I purchase slabbed, so I have not encountered getting coins back in "body bags", and it's not likely to happen any time soon. It kind of looks like the entire submittal return (coin flip, tag and NGC card) is placed in a poly bag sealed closed with scotch tape. I had heard that the TPGs may have changed, or maybe are reconsidering, that method of returning coins somewhat due to the appropriate but negative connotation associated with that name.

Interesting Sandon. I have and intent to keep virtually my entire collection as raw coins or in OGP, except ones I purchase slabbed, so I have not encountered getting coins back in "body bags", and it's not likely to happen any time soon. It kind of looks like the entire submittal return (coin flip, tag and NGC card) is placed in a poly bag sealed closed with scotch tape. I had heard that the TPGs may have changed or maybe are reconsidering that method of returning coins somewhat due to the appropriate but negative connotation associated with that name.

@EagleRJO--In the early years of grading services, coins that had any impairment, including being "cleaned", were not encapsulated but were returned in flips. The somewhat morbid terminology of "slabs" and "body bags" began at that time, with collectors and (especially) dealers complaining that their coins had been "body bagged" for some trivial reason. Details grading and encapsulation for impaired but genuine and unaltered coins didn't start until some years later, initially with the small ANACS holders. For a while PCGS would encapsulate impaired coins with no grade at all in a holder identifying the coin by denomination, date, mint and variety with no grade and the description "Genuine". Nowadays both NGC and PCGS will encapsulate and details grade nearly all genuine coins, except for coins that whose dates, mintmarks or other vital features have been altered to defraud. NGC will not encapsulate coins with "altered surfaces" and, as I recall, neither NGC nor PCGS will encapsulate a coin with a "peeling lamination" that might come off.

The target coins of Big Pump Signal over the past six months are typical of the pump groups: coins with just enough trading activity to garner broader interest, pulling in new traders, and inexpensive enough for people to buy up a meaningful share.

Cloakcoin was a middle-of-the-pack pump for Big Pump Signal. The coin was traded on only eight exchanges and was ranked 225 among other cryptos on CoinMarketCap in early July, which tracks market activity across 1,600 coins.

The Journal on June 29 visited each Telegram or Discord link to determine if the group was still active and found 63 rooms with publicly accessible chat histories. While reviewing communications taking place since Jan. 1, the Journal collected the name of cryptocoins mentioned in messages sent by moderators directing followers to trade at a specific date and on a single exchange.

The Journal then downloaded pricing, volume and market capitalization data at five minute intervals from CoinMarketCap.com between Jan. 1 and Aug. 2. The Journal found 121 different digital coins mentioned in chat logs with corresponding trading data found on CoinMarketCap.com among 175 messages directing participants to trade.

You may have noticed posts that include a "challenge coin" that has this group's logo and montra on it. This post is to explain the coin and explain how one earns a coin. I hope it encourages you to get engaged and start to help this community push forward its agenda to connect people together through bourbon. 


One time I accidentally joined a Mexican cigar gang. I was at a cigar fundraiser and knew almost no one. I walked past a table with some cool looking guys and there was a real WWE wrestling belt on the table that said "El Presidente". I was curious, so I asked "WTF is that"? The guy said, that's my belt for my cigar club. I'm "El Presidentee"! We made fast friends and he ended up handing me a challenge coin that signified he accepted me as a member of his club. I said "What happens now? You call me in the middle of the night and I show up with a shovel?"...he said "Basically!". It did something to me psychologically. I realized I wanted to do something similar, but not to connect people to my podcast or community. I wanted it to connect them to the mission. 


As a result, Lindsey designed this challenge coin with help from Wes. Lindsey had coins made, and we are now giving them out to individuals who do something that connects people. The coins ARE NOT FOR SALE! You must earn the coin! They are not transferable! They will always be given free of charge to individuals who exhibit they are an "Official Force For Good" by helping people get "Connected Through Bourbon".


There are 5 different coins. The black coin is the coin you get the first time you do something kind in the community. The red, blue, and white coins are higher level coins, but we are not publicly disclosing what the recipient did to earn those coins. We do not want to set up a system of payment for kind acts, but instead hope that people look for opportunities to give without expectation so that the coin is a reward and not a payment. The green coin is a little different. Instead of saying Official Force For Good, it says Top Contributor. Facebook tracks how much you are contributing in the community through posts, comments, and reactions. Without engaging content this community would not be very fun, so we believe our TCs deserve recognition. The first time someone makes the TC list they will get a green coin. 


If you want a coin, get engaged and start giving to the community. We are watching, and don't be surprised if a coin shows up in the mail. If someone has done something you believe is worthy of a coin please use the below link to nominate them. The spirit of the coin dictates that an individual be humble to deserve it, so they likely would not point out the kind act on their own. It will take the community reporting kind acts for us to collect the names of all those in the community that are coin worthy. The act does NOT have to have been in the BRTC. Any worthy act should be rewarded.If you have already received a coin, we hope it motivates you to continue to look for opportunities to be an "official force for good", and who knows...there may be some higher level coins in the future! ff782bc1db

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