Money (Item)

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This entry contains information from data found in the console commands, old game versions, and/or game files. The use for this information is based on speculation and may not be accessible through normal gameplay.


Money.png
Name
Money
Type
Currency
Item ID
Money_Entity

Money is an item in Pathologic 2. It can be used to buy items in Stores.

Money was originally a physical item that would take up inventory space in the Pathologic 2 Alpha release, as well as the 2016 Pathologic: The Marble Nest demo, but it is not present as a physical item in the full release of either game. Instead, money is measured in a separate counter displayed in the inventory screen.

However, money will still appear as a physical object when looting, and can be hovered over.

Quotes

Hover Quotes
Haruspex The Marble Nest Alpha
HaruspexProfile.png BachelorProfile.png NPC Haruspex.png
Used to buy items in shops. Offering it during common street barter, however, would be seen as offensive. Oddly enough, money is used to buy items in shops. Offering it during common street barter, however, would be seen as offensive. Oddly enough, money is used to buy items in shops. Offering it during common street barter, however, would be seen as offensive.


Touch Quotes
Haruspex The Marble Nest Alpha
HaruspexProfile.png BachelorProfile.png NPC Haruspex.png
Coins from other times and countries can be found in the Town. Incredibly, shops and traders accept them all. On the third day of the epidemic local prices went through the roof; now, on the eighth day, very few people agree to actually trade for money, preferring barter instead. The latter is more cumbersome, but can yield lucrative rewards. (2016 release) While we all know what actual money looks like, coins from different countries and times can be seen in the Town. Incredibly, shops and traders accept them all.

Notes

  • The coins used in the artwork are several coins that exist in the real world. Listed from bottom left to middle right to top right: a 1757 Russian kopek; several coins, one labelled '1987', that resemble the Moroccan dirham; a Spanish gold escudo of unknown year (the coin was issued from 1535 to 1833); and a British one-pound coin from 1984 or 1989.