I watched a streamer lose a perfect clip because he ignored a small, bronze coin sitting under the lights. Ten seconds later he used a single Prize and the scoreboard flipped so fast the chat called it witchcraft. That moment taught me which Prizes force a game to bend to your will.
I’m going to walk you through every Prize in RACCOIN: Coin Pusher Roguelike, explain how they actually change runs, and point out the handful that will decide whether you scrape tickets or steamroll the leaderboards. Read this like a playbook—because once you can read the table, you can start making choices that feel inevitable.
At a Twitch stream last weekend a single Prize turned a lost run into a replayable highlight. Now the breakdown.
There are 30 Prizes in the game. Each Prize modifies coins or places gadgets that reorder the physics of a run—some are subtle quality-of-life changes, others rewrite scoring math. Prizes you obtain during runs will then have a chance to appear again in future runs, so your decisions compound. Prizes are the small decisions that make you feel like a better player tomorrow.
Quick mechanics note: when you choose a Prize, its effect activates automatically or places a gadget you can use. Some affect a single coin in your clip; others target an area on the table. The table below lists each Prize and its effect so you can plan for combos rather than hope for them.
| Prize | Effect |
|---|---|
| Gold Squishie | Apply the Golden modifier to a coin. While in the clip: +25 sell price per round. When scored: +10 Tickets. |
| Clock Squishie | Apply the Clock modifier to a coin. If the coin has a round trigger, it activates every 12 coins inserted. |
| Triangle Squishie | Apply the Triangle modifier to a coin. When scored: counted as three separate scores. |
| Fault Squishie | Apply the Bug modifier to a coin. Bug raises that coin’s shop spawn frequency. |
| Whitehole Doll | Draws coins in the selected area and returns them to the upper platform. |
| Tax Doll | +2 Tickets for each coin in the selected area. |
| Rain Badge | Rains 3–6 of your most purchased coin. Coins drop from above the upper platform. |
| Screw Badge | Strong cabinet shake that significantly repositions coins. |
| Ice Badge | Reduces friction for 10 seconds, letting coins slide farther. |
| Pulse Badge | Combo won’t break for 10 seconds. |
| Bakugan Badge | Detonates every Prize Ball currently in play. |
| Fishbone Figurine | Place the Fragile Fishbone gadget: a removable physical barrier to redirect coin paths. |
| Dish Figurine | Place the Cooking Pot gadget. Spend 5% of your tickets to cook two selected coins into dishes. |
| Leftovers Figurine | Place the Leftovers Pot gadget. It periodically spawns a dish coin of rising rarity. |
| Root Squishie | Apply the Origin modifier to a coin. Origin spawns the same coin each round. |
| Doodle Squishie | Apply the last modifier you used to a coin. |
| Blackhole Doll | Draws coins in the selected area and scores them instantly. |
| Rich Doll | Consumes 20% of your ticket balance. Coins in the selected area gain value equal to the tickets consumed. |
| Berserker Badge | Random outcome: either grants Target Score or triggers an extra Bad Coin wave. |
| Mirror Badge | Copy a selected coin from your clip. |
| Saucer Figurine | Place the UFO Caller gadget. After every three sold items it either absorbs or drops coins. |
| Cage Figurine | Place the Coin Cage gadget. It holds up to two coins; caged coins no longer appear in the shop. |
| Woof Figurine | Place the Woofchelin Table gadget. At round end you earn tickets based on nearby dish coins. |
| Zombie Squishie | Apply the Zombie modifier to a coin. Converts coins it touches into copies (up to 20 times per round). |
| Infinity Squishie | Apply the Return modifier to a coin. When scored, the coin returns to play. |
| Mask Doll | Converts coins in a selected area into random coins of the same rarity. |
| Balance Doll | Set coins in the selected area to the value of the most valuable coin among them. |
| Idol Figurine | Place the Coin Stage gadget. Insert coins to make selected coins rain. |
| Delivery Figurine | Place the Food Trolley gadget. Scores nearby specific dishes and grants +1 Score Rate. |
| TV Tower Figurine | Place the Raccoon Tower gadget. Ignores the BadBad modifier and destroys nearby Bad Coins. After three special coins are used you gain one destroy charge. |
The table is your map. Treat gadget placement like setting dominos: one careful nudge can topple value across the board and turn mediocre buys into runaway clips.
How do Prizes appear during a run?
You obtain Prizes during runs and then they become available to appear in future runs. Some act instantly, some stick around as gadgets. The more you favor a Prize (buying, using, or combining it), the more it will show up for you—this is how you bend probability in your favor over time. Streamers on Steam and communities on Reddit often track which combos repeatedly win runs; study their VODs on Twitch to see timing in action.
Which Prizes should you prioritize for high scores?
If you want tickets and leaderboard momentum, focus on a narrow set rather than collecting everything on your first tries. Gold Squishie and Triangle Squishie multiply raw ticket output; Blackhole Doll and Rich Doll convert messy piles into instant value. For control, Fishbone, Cage, and Idol Figurine let you surgically create scoring lanes. Speedrunners on leaderboards pair Mirror + Triangle to explode score per clip; content creators on Moyens I/O and Steam guides often push those combos.
How do gadgets change strategy mid-run?
Gadgets change the table itself: the Woofchelin Table turns nearby dish coins into consistent end-of-round income, while the UFO Caller is a high-variance tool that can either salvage a run or tilt it. Use gadgets when your run is fragile—think of them as insurance policies, not miracle cures.
Two practical tips from my tests: first, treat the Pulse and Ice Badges as tempo tools—one will buy time, the other increases reach. Second, never casually spend Rich Doll without checking your ticket balance; it can skyrocket a single area but leave you cash-poor for the next round.
Want to chase the completionist achievement? You’ll need to obtain every Prize—yes, every single one—and that usually requires targeted runs and a willingness to experiment. Community tools like Steam guides, subreddit spreadsheets, and Discord strategy channels will save you a lot of trial-and-error time.

If you want a fast checklist: prioritize Gold, Triangle, Blackhole, Mirror, and one reliable gadget (Fishbone or Idol). Those five create a loop that keeps selling high-value coins and restocking your clip with usable pieces. Prizes are small bets that compound; treat them as experiments not prayers.
I’ll leave you with this: the Prize you dismiss as useless in one run can be the thin thread that pulls a perfect run together in the next—so which Prize will you gamble your next run on?