They sell these on AlieExpress direct from China. They are usually not cast, but struck from cheaply made dies, on cheaply made planchets, with sub-par equipment. This particular one does look extra wonky though.
Based on the photo, I don't think so. The majority of counterfeits in the market today are struck with counterfeit dies. Just saying...
Looks like a Chinese fake to me too. Weird surfaces. They use hydraulic presses to stamp these things out like bottle caps.
This is just me, but I'd never buy a raw coin, no matter what condition, from a seller who posts a picture holding both sides of the coin with his fingers. Call me picky, but that's my first indicator that something isn't right.
Or the coin is too cheap! I'm holding a 1916-S MS-64 Saint that I'll sell you for $400. Bet you would knock me over getting your checkbook out. Fortunately my fingers are on the edge but I'm making a point about "never." just to be an
*Sigh* (sarcasm) Substitute "very unlikely unless in rare situations" for "never" BTW, you wouldn't happen to post on the NGC boards under a different nickname would you?
No I don't are they any good?/entertaining?/educational? I try to inject a little humor in my comments...