I was thinking that not all coins/tokens are minable , minable as in giving your computing power in exchange for coins/tokens. And how to tell of they are mineable.
Under those links are a couple of badges, one is rank 48 (which means it's got the 48th largest market cap) another badge says "coin" meaning it's a coin rather than a "token" or "asset" and a third badge which says "minable".
So that means it is mineable, but then you need to do your own research into how to mine it.
Using the same example of Vertcoin - I can tell you (because I mine it myself) that it is mined using the Lyra2rev2 (or just Lyra2v2) algorithm and the best way to do that that I am aware of is to use Nvidia GPUs (I use 5 x 1060s and 4 x 1070s) and the latest version of ccminer which uses cuda 9, and find out which P2Pool vertcoin node is closest to you (or at least has the fastest ping time) and configure the ccminer to mine on that pool node, with your Vertcoin address as username and x as the password. If you do use a P2Pool node (there are P2Pools for many different coins, it was originally used for bitcoin I think) you should be mining to an actual wallet on one of you own computers and not to an exchange address.
As someone else pointed out - you can also look at whattomine.com and see a list based on what GPUs you have and how much you pay for power - of SOME of the coins out there that may be profitable to you. They don't list all of them however - currently it's telling me that Feathercoin (FTC) would be my most profitable option but I happen to know that I'm doing better mining Bitcoin Gold (BTG).
If you just want some easy way to get your GPUs to earn for you you can download Nicehash's software and it will benchmark your GPUs then supposedly mine whatever is most profitable but that is based on Nicehash's market demand and not on the actual profitability of the open market.
Thank you very much for your extensive reply , it is very useful!