

A maximum stack in this common alternative format can hold for the player an additional 53,687,091,175 (almost 53.7 billion) coins. They are therefore the typically chosen currency when coins are no longer an option. Shards are worth a static amount of 25 coins and can be sold to any summoning store for this amount. Players with wealth exceeding this amount usually choose to either invest their money in discontinued items or spirit shards, or another item of high market liquidity.
HERO OF THE KINGDOM 3 EASY MONEY PLUS
In terms of actual coins, it is possible to store separate stacks of money in the bank, inventory, money pouch, Grand Exchange, mahogany prize chest, treasure chest, and kingdom of Miscellania (7.5M max), giving an absolute total of 27,924,787,411 coins stored - thirteen max-stacks plus 7.5 million. The maximum number of coins that players may hold in a single stack is 2,147,483,647 due to the usage of the signed 32-bit integer data type (maximum value of 2 31- 1). A player receiving 15M can be guaranteed that the stack is not just 14.5M rounded up. This protects players receiving the coins in trade from being cheated by rounded values, e.g. With larger stacks of coin - as with all stackable items - both the colour of the text and the stack's examine text change, depending on the amount of gold in the stack.Ī stack of coins that uses a 'K' or 'M' identifier always rounds down to the integer multiple.

On Spanish and Portuguese language worlds, the symbol for "k" is changed to "m", since "Mil" is Spanish and Portuguese for "thousand".Ī stack of gold has a small coloured text on the upper-left hand corner of the stack. On German-language servers, the symbol for "k" is changed to "T", since "Tausend" is German for "thousand". Likewise, one million coins is often called 1mil or 1M, and one billion coins is referred to as 1bil or 1B. Similar to the metric system, the "k" stands for "kilo", which is Greek for "thousand". One thousand coins (1,000) is usually referred to as 1k. A postage stamp showing Postie Pete refers to coins as "gp".
