Fun fact, it's not counterfeiting if the denomination doesn't exist, so the charge would be theft by deception. In the early 2000s, there were several cases of people using a $200 bill and getting change back on their purchases, and not able to be charged with counterfeiting.
Police in Kentucky are looking for a customer who succeeded in paying for a $2 order at a fast-food restaurant with a phony $200 bill featuring a picture of President George W. Bush and a depiction of the White House with a lawn sign saying, "We like broccoli."
Authorities say the female cashier at a Dairy Queen in Danville even gave the culprit $198 in real money as change.
I've seen those Bush bills. I had one where he was visibly beaten up and the seal with the country name instead said "The Embarrassed States of America."
The only way I could see someone actually accepting those bills is if they literally didn't even look at them because they were so obviously jokes.