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Sydney Rental Ad is Brutally Mocked Online after Bizarre Photoshopping

  A rental advertisement for a two-bed house in Sydney has been brutally mocked online for using 'cartoon furnishings'. The house located on Belmore Street in Rozelle has turned into a laughing matter after the Domain listing was made public on the Facebook page Humans of Eastwood Daily The house is described as 'brand new' and features 'carpet all over with a separate lounge' as well as a tidy kitchen with two bedrooms, a bathroom, and a the garden is well-maintained. A Sydney rental listing for a home with two bedrooms was brutally mocked online because it used cartoon furniture After the advertisement was posted on Facebook by Humans of Eastwood Daily, the apartment at Belmore Street in Rozelle became an unpopular item The photos tell a different story, with fake furniture scattered throughout the house. In the living room there is a bright red sofa, with an animated fireplace, as well as TV. The most extreme move that a retail assistant and her family make following... A finance professional exposes FIVE of the most omitted taxes... She's not a natural presenter!' Amanda from Yorkshire Farm... In the home the dining table, garden and bedroom furniture are all computer-generated. The post went viral and hundreds people posted comments, joking that it was like a computer game. The house is described by the seller as being brand new and comes with 'carpet throughout'. It also comes with a separate living room', neat kitchen, two bedrooms, and an bathroom. All furniture was photographed. The photos however provide a different picture. They show fake photographs taken by computers all over the garden and home. 'Wanna play sims?' One person asked. Another said, The metaverse exists now. He had a friend who knew someone who could cut the price ...' He joked about one. 'Reminds me of that nightmare I've experienced where I'm stuck in a pool or a burning house and have no way to escape. My karma for the way I treated my Sims 20 years ago, wrote another. Comes with NFT furniture, said one. In the living room there was a bright red couch and a cartoon fireplace, and a TV. The dining table, garden and bedroom furniture were all computer generated too LJ Hooker, a real estate agent who listed the property, admitted that it was an inside job. Realtor Mary Aidonas told Yahoo News Australia that it was her 'little fake furniture' and that she was 'no expert' in graphic design, but gave it a go'. 'Is this something you've learned from Minecraft or Minecraft?' Another person asked. LJ Hooker, a real estate agent, advertised the property and admitted that it was an 'inside job. Realtor Mary Aidonas told Yahoo News Australia it was her 'little fake furniture' and said she was 'no expert' in graphic design, but she 'gave it a shot'. She explained, It is from Paint. The latest Paint. You can choose furniture. And so that is what came up. People joked the home looked like a 'early nineties video game' with people likening it to Sims and Minecraft The house is adorned with fake furniture - including bizarre signs, and fireplaces, and numerous sofas I stretched it out and thought, oh, it looks alright at the time. I was thinking we could be able to get some attention for it since it [the property] had been dormant all of the time. She appears to have taken the criticism in good faith, she said there's no thing as 'bad press'. I did not know that I would get such a reply. She responds, Someone has already emailed me, why does the furniture appear to be something from a videogame that was released in the early 2000s? Well I suppose that's the place the application came from. MINECRAFT SKINS Property Gurus South Australia, an agency for real estate which has left online users shocked by its bizarre photoshopping earlier this month. The agent advertised a four bedroom brick home in Elizabeth Downs, north Adelaide , for $350,000 Earlier this month, real estate agent Property Gurus South Australia left people on the internet in awe with its bizarre photoshopping. The agent advertised the brick house with four bedrooms in Elizabeth Downs (north Adelaide) for $350,000 The listing went viral on the internet and house hunters mocked the poor Photoshopping of the house's lush front lawn and backyard. One house hunter said, That's the new grass variety known as Chernobyl, you should be able to see them at night, referring to the Ukrainian town that was home to a nuclear power plant that was destroyed in 1986.

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