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Post by Narrator on Mar 22, 2008 15:57:38 GMT -8
From the DLG: The unit of monetary exchange is the mark. These are disks made of wood, supplied as blanks by Lemos Hold and stamped with special dies that denote value and source. The value of the mark fluctuates with supply of Barterable goods. Every major Hold and Hall has its own die stamps for impressing marks. The denominations are 1/32 of a mark, 1/16, 1/8, 1/4, 1, 2, 5, 10 marks, and a few 100 mark pieces for very large transactions. Only so many marks are issued per Turn, to balance the supply of goods or to replace old, warn-out mark pieces.
To make things simpler, here is the break down of Marks compared to the US Dollar.
1/32 mark... $0.63 1/16 mark... $1.25 1/8 mark... $2.50 1/4 mark... $5 1 mark... $20 2 mark... $40 5 mark... $100 10 mark... $200 100 mark... $2,000
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INFORMATION PENDING
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