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This coin was produced in 1987 by Infocom Software and included in the release of a computer game package called: Zork Trillogy. The game industry has a funny name for objects included in the box along with the software. They call these items: Touchie-Feelies. Infocom was the first company to include objects inside game boxes that went along with the premise of the game. Generally these items were make-believe passports, train tickets, cards, maps, and buttons. The Zorkmid coin is probably the most famous feelie produced. |
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| The coin has PVC damage from
being kept in the original poly bag all this
time. In the photo above you can see a greenish spot under his
ear,
and on the photo below, there is a grey-ish spot to the left of the
castle door. This corrosion is caused by the plastic bag! PVC is put into clear plastic to make it flexible. Over time it leaches out and combines with moisture in the air to form hydrochloric acid. If you have any coins in flexible poly bags or envelopes, remove them immediately! Go to your local coin shop and buy archival-quality PVC-free coin containers. |
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| The Zorkmid was produced by a
coin-and-token manufacturer on behalf of
Infocom. They are a copper composite. They
were antiqued in order to make them appear old. The coin is not
entirely round;
it is 32 mm at its widest point. Oh, you're wondering what's the point? Zork was a text-based adventure game. The player explored the Great Underground Empire, and collected treasure. The unit of currency was the Zorkmid, which has made its way into several other computer games produced since Zork, (such as Nethack, among others.) |