The Licinius coin below is either listed in RIC VI or RIC VII, or maybe both.
The reverse description from RIC VI for Heraclea 73 is "Jupiter stg. facing, head l., chlamys hanging from l. shoulder, r. holding victory on globe, l. leaning on sceptre; eagle with wreath in beak at feet to l."
RIC VII Heraclea 5 is "Jupiter stg. l., chlamys across l. shoulder, leaning on sceptre, holding victory on globe in r. hand; eagle holding wreath to l. on ground."
So, by the description the reverse a bit different- RIC VI Jupiter is standing facing with head left; while in RIC VII Jupiter is standing left.
However RIC VI and RIC VII happen to have plate coins for each and they are identical.
The rarity is even different- RIC VI is common while RIC VII lists them as r3.
The problem is that for the RIC VI issue Maximinus II was alive and included; but by the first issues for RIC VII Maximinus was dead. So maybe Bruun was only giving a theoretical rarity, since he suspected less of the coins were struck after the death of Maximinus II.
This could be a bit confusing to someone trying to attribute their coins though