Solomon Islands has issued a long-running series of miniature gold pieces under various themed programs, and this dragon entry falls within that commercially driven collector market rather than any monetary necessity. At 0.5 g of .9999 fine gold, these were never intended for circulation — the face value is nominal fiction.
The irregular dimensions reflect a shaped-planchet format that became fashionable among Pacific island mints in the 2010s as a way to differentiate product in a crowded bullion-gift market. KM# 606 places it firmly within a catalogued series, though secondary market pricing tracks gold spot far more closely than any numismatic premium.
Solomon Islands has issued a long-running series of miniature gold pieces under various themed programs, and this dragon entry falls within that commercially driven collector market rather than any monetary necessity. At 0.5 g of .9999 fine gold, these were never intended for circulation — the face value is nominal fiction.
The irregular dimensions reflect a shaped-planchet format that became fashionable among Pacific island mints in the 2010s as a way to differentiate product in a crowded bullion-gift market. KM# 606 places it firmly within a catalogued series, though secondary market pricing tracks gold spot far more closely than any numismatic premium.