How much is a 12, ounce bottle of Coors beer over 20 years old? Serious answers please.?!
Even if you had a "collectable" bottle, the market on beer cans/bottles is poor.
Answers: Next to nothing. However, the contents won't kill you or make you sick. There is nothing in beer that will kill you (except drinking it in excess). At most it will taste bad from oxidation or reaction to UV light (makes it taste "skunky") or it will be flat.
Even if you had a "collectable" bottle, the market on beer cans/bottles is poor.
How much money? I would venture a guess at nothing. Still full of beer? I'd be interested in how it smelled when the cap comes off.
Worthless.
And probably rancid and smelly, too.
It's worth only as much as someone is willing to pay for it. I'd imagine nothing, because if they drank it then it would KILL THEM.
Probably worth very little unless you can find a person who collects Coors and are lucky enough to have a bottle that is collectible.
Absolutely nothing. It'll be way past skunked....
YOU'RE RICH!!! Just kidding. Actually, your grammar is horrid, are you an American? Probably so, most Americans write worse English than aliens. Statistics are showing us as not too bright; ipso facto, Americans are spending their intelligent trust money on some pretty goofy things, so put your old, not-anywhere-near-antique, worthless can of junk up for bids on E-Bay and see what happens, you never know! You won't lose money underestimating American consumer intelligence.
The only way your can of Coors could be worth anything is if it was a special promotional item. I.E. Super Bowl,World Series,a particular college team---something like that. And then only if you can find a collector that simply has to have it.