I’ve been making Vietnamese coin for years now. They are so easy to make, they’re even fun to play with. I never use plastic, just real metal coins. The end result is a delicious treat that is perfect for holiday time.
Like the Vietnamese dollar, the Vietnamese coin was originally created as a practical money that would be accepted in Vietnam, but it was never widely accepted. It was only in the 1970’s that Vietnamese people began to trade in the coin for gold, and in the 1980’s the Vietnamese government began to mint their own coin.
This is a pretty cool one, the Vietnamese coin is gold plated, and has the symbol of the Vietnamese government on it, although it is not legal tender, as it is not backed by enough gold to be legal tender. The Vietnamese coin was very popular throughout the early 2000s, but it finally came down to extinction in 2009. The Vietnamese government still mints their own coin, but it is not legal tender.
The Vietnamese government is not legal tender. The Vietnamese Government mints their own coin, but it is not legal tender. The Vietnamese currency is not backed by gold, but it still is legal tender. When you go to the bank, the bank tells you that you are not legal tender, and there is no way to prove it. The Vietnamese Government might be legal tender, it may not be. We can never be sure.
The Vietnam, and I say that with a great deal of irony, has the most counterfeits per capita in the world. The Vietnamese government may not be legal tender though, so don’t get your hopes up.
The Vietnam currency is backed by gold, but it is legal tender, so it doesn’t matter if your coins are counterfeit. In fact, there are some coins out there that look identical to real coins, but they do not. We are all aware that the Vietnamese government is attempting to collect the value of counterfeit money, but their gold backed money is not backed by gold.
As you can see by comparing images above and below, the Vietnamese government is trying very hard to get as many fake coins as they can. It is also one of the few countries that allows people to go and buy things with their fake money, but they are not allowed to sell it to a third party. That’s why people like us who have money in real money have to use coins like the Vietnamese government is trying to do.
This is the type of coin that we get to play with at the end of the game, where we have to sell our fake coins to the government to get a real gold coin for our fake money, but the government doesn’t want the coins because they use them to buy things from people (like the Vietnamese government).
This is exactly the sort of situation where I would expect to see someone trying to sell fake money to the government, or at least trying to sell at very low prices. But I guess if we are playing in this game, that means we arent supposed to be buying from these people.
Although we are not supposed to be buying from the Vietnamese government, they are the ones who are trying to sell us fake money. So we have to sell our fake money to the Vietnamese government.