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''[http://forum.dominionstrategy.com/index.php?topic=12911.0 Original article] by -Stef-'' | ''[http://forum.dominionstrategy.com/index.php?topic=12911.0 Original article] by -Stef-'' | ||
− | A coin token is worth slightly more than a [[coin]], because you don't necessarily have to spend it at the end of your turn. For most of these cards you can imagine a variant that gives coins | + | A coin token is worth slightly more than a [[coin]], because you don't necessarily have to spend it at the end of your turn. For most of these cards you can imagine a variant that gives coins in stead of coin tokens, and you'd just have a slightly worse card. How much worse? That greatly depends on the kingdom, the game, your turn. The important thing to remember is this: most of the time you want to spend your money. You can use it to buy better cards, which in a turn or two will generate you even more money. So the most common case is that a coin token is exactly the same as a coin. If you don't spend it, it's sort of in your savings account, except you get a zero percent interest rate. Surely investing in your deck is better than that. There are of course exceptions, and that's where coin tokens get interesting: |
# {{Cost|3}} + {{Cost|5}} could be better than {{Cost|4}} + {{Cost|4}}. Sometimes you really want a more expensive card to kick-start your deck. | # {{Cost|3}} + {{Cost|5}} could be better than {{Cost|4}} + {{Cost|4}}. Sometimes you really want a more expensive card to kick-start your deck. |