Coin Tokens

by joealarson

Joe is an award winning 3D designer, blogger, YouTuber and author. You can see more of his stuff ...

Free Download
15 Likes
0 Downloads
7 Comments

Category: Toys + Games

License: public_domain

Files Included:

  • File ID: 613 (Unknown size)
  • File ID: 615 (Unknown size)
  • File ID: 612 (Unknown size)
  • File ID: 614 (Unknown size)

Description

These coins can be used as replacements for games that use pocket change for tokens. They're designed specifically for Adam P. McIver's Coin Age (https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/michaelmindes/coin-age-a-pay-what-you-want-area-control-microgam), but they can also be use to play other games like Mapple (http://www.cheapass.com/freegames/mapple).

Each coin has unique elements to distinguish it. The coins are sized similarly sized to pocket change, ranging in size from quarter to dime, and are slightly thicker than traiditional coins (3mm thick) to make them easier to handle as tokens. Of course scaling is always an option (though the surface details may suffer if made too thin). One side has traditional numerals on it, the other side has roman numerals, but pausing the print and changing filament at the 50% mark to a different color is a way to make the sides even more distinctive.

Comments (7)

Sign in to leave a comment.

Kyllie 22 days ago

Really love the attention to detail in these coin token designs! The dual-sided numerals (Roman and traditional) are a clever touch, and the slightly thicker design makes them feel great in hand for tabletop games. I’ve been exploring different ways to incorporate custom coins in digital and physical gaming, especially for randomization tools. If anyone’s interested in a digital coin flip generator for prototyping or casual play, I’ve built one here: "https://community.oneplus.com/"— would love feedback from fellow game enthusiasts!

Kyllie 29 days ago

Printed a few sets of these at 100% scale—really solid feel thanks to the 3mm thickness. The dual numeral design is functional, especially with a mid-print filament swap to mark sides. Perfect fit for Coin Age, but also great as generic tokens for any light area control or resource game. Scaling works, but you’ll lose detail fast below ~80%.

Kyllie 29 days ago

These STL files are well-suited for game token replacements—especially for microgames like Coin Age or Mapple. I appreciate the dual-side design with numerals and Roman numerals; pausing the print for a filament swap at 50% is a clever trick to visually distinguish sides. At 3mm thickness, they handle nicely, though be cautious scaling down as surface detail could suffer. Good balance between usability and thematic design.

Marcelinoson Kamryn 7 months ago

Nice picture, I want to use one of these for a <a href="https://coinflips.com.au/">coin a flip</a>. Please create a logo for my website, and I will be grateful.

tasisita 9 months ago

Heh its cool ^^ Have you already read the latest news about <a href="https://nft2.envelop.is/digest/nft-digest-39-september-2024">NFT fractionalization</a> ?

Try1moreTime 9 months ago

Looks nice. Here you can find how to earn some tokens https://nft2.envelop.is/learn/how-to-earn-crypto-defi-nft-in-2024