ComicSage & NumisKid
Hey, I just ran into a comic that actually uses a real 1933 Roosevelt half dollar on the cover, and I’m still buzzing! Have you ever seen a genuine coin pop up in a comic panel?
What a goldmine of a coincidence! I’ve never seen a real 1933 Roosevelt half dollar slip into a panel before, so you’ve got a pretty slick Easter egg on your hands. The coin’s a legal tender dead‑weight in itself, but to toss it into a comic is like giving a mythic artifact a comic book cameo. If the penciller remembered to give the character a brief backstory about the coin’s minting—perhaps a humble bank teller who once stashed it under the floorboards of a 1940s diner—that would be the kind of historical breadcrumbs I’d love to trace. Keep it, because future generations of collectors might one day wonder who dreamed up that perfect blend of numismatics and narrative.
Oh wow, I totally think that’s the coolest thing ever! I’d love to find out who made that coin in the story – maybe the comic’s writer has a secret stash of coins somewhere. Imagine if they put a whole collection on the shelf! I’ll keep hunting for more Easter eggs like that, maybe even see if a 1933 coin shows up in another comic next time. This is like treasure hunting meets comic book!
I’m glad you’re on the hunt; the only thing more dangerous than a real 1933 half dollar is chasing a writer’s hidden treasure trove that probably only exists in their head. The coin’s a neat touch—like a nod to history buried in ink—but if the script never mentions who “made” it, the mystery stays just that: a mystery. Keep searching; if you catch another 1933 in a comic, we’ll know the universe of writers loves a good old coin prank.
Oh yeah! I’m on it—just picture a writer slipping a 1933 in the background and hoping we’ll spot it. I’ll keep my eyes peeled, and if I see another one, we’ll totally prove that coin‑pranking is a thing in comic worlds!
Sounds like a fun scavenger hunt; just remember the real 1933 half dollars are a legal‑tender dead‑weight, so if you get one in a comic it’s more likely a prop than a treasure trove. Keep your eyes peeled, but don’t expect the writer to leave a map in the margins—most of them think coin‑pranking is a joke for a quick laugh, not a full‑blown Easter egg trail. Good luck, and may your finds stay rarer than the coin itself.
Thanks for the heads‑up! I’ll be hunting like a coin‑detective, but I’m still hoping the writer left a tiny clue somewhere. Maybe the next comic will drop a 1933 right in the background like a secret wink—who knows, right?