Lots of RPGs love to add flavor to their world with different types of currency, so which ones stand out for you? Rupees, Macca, Gil, or traditional Gold? What about something more obscure?
Lots of RPGs love to add flavor to their world with different types of currency, so which ones stand out for you? Rupees, Macca, Gil, or traditional Gold? What about something more obscure?
True beauty exists in things that last only for a moment.
Current Mood: Step out the front door like a ghost into the fog Where no one notices the contrast of white on white And in between the moon and you, the angels get a better view Of the crumbling difference between wrong and right
I love when videogames use a different term for gold, even as slang. For example "drakes" in Elder Scrolls and "sovereigns" in Dragon Age.
Ludder.
thanks to avgn. "Cheap ass hoe" is an insult I like to throw at unworking technology.
So yup. Ludder
Munny.
Capcom games usually used Zenny. I believe even Mega Man Legends used that form of currency. I have a weird nostalgia for it. However, I also adore the classic GP. I'm old.
Gil.
Yeah Zenny, though from Breath of Fire rather than Ultra Fellow Stories. Also as Pike says there are some games that use neat little terms for standard gold, like in DA or TES.
And of course, Credits in every sci-fi game ever.
I always liked the Zenny and it was a unique name for currency.
You people are traitors! This is a Final Fantasy site and you say something other than Gil.
Munny is very satisfying to collect so I'll go with that.
True beauty exists in things that last only for a moment.
Current Mood: Step out the front door like a ghost into the fog Where no one notices the contrast of white on white And in between the moon and you, the angels get a better view Of the crumbling difference between wrong and right
The real question is: gil with a hard or soft g?
It's hard g of course, just like GIF.IGNORE WHAT THE GUY WHO CREATED GIFS SAYS. he is an outlier and shouldn't be counted
Definatly Gill not Jill
edit: was it GP in japan though?