Ghana's "Alien" issues belong to a collector-driven bullion program the Bank of Ghana launched in the late 2010s, licensing pop-culture and novelty themes explicitly to compete in the international silver coin market — a strategy borrowed directly from smaller minting nations like Niue and Palau that had profited for years by selling themed legal tender to foreign collectors rather than domestic users.
These pieces never circulated in Ghana. Struck to .999 fineness at weights calibrated for the collector market, they were sold wholesale through European distribution networks, primarily in Germany and the Netherlands.
Ghana's "Alien" issues belong to a collector-driven bullion program the Bank of Ghana launched in the late 2010s, licensing pop-culture and novelty themes explicitly to compete in the international silver coin market — a strategy borrowed directly from smaller minting nations like Niue and Palau that had profited for years by selling themed legal tender to foreign collectors rather than domestic users.
These pieces never circulated in Ghana. Struck to .999 fineness at weights calibrated for the collector market, they were sold wholesale through European distribution networks, primarily in Germany and the Netherlands.