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Sydney Rental ad is Brutally Mocked Online after Bizarre Photoshopping

  A rental advertisement for two-bedroom house in Sydney has been slammed online for using 'cartoon furniture'. The house on Belmore Street in Rozelle has become a laughing stock after the Domain listing was shared on Facebook page Humans of Eastwood Daily The house is described as 'brand new' and has 'carpet throughout and a separate lounge' as well as tidy kitchen, two bedrooms, a bathroom, and a an outdoor space that is landscaped. A Sydney rental listing for a home with two bedrooms was slammed on the internet because it featured 'cartoon furniture' After the listing was put up on Facebook by Humans of Eastwood Daily, the house at Belmore Street in Rozelle became a laughing stock But the photos aren't as clear - with the snaps showing fake computer generated furniture all over the home. In the living room there is a bright red couch with a cartoon fireplace, and television. The extreme move retail assistant and her family make after... Finance expert shares five of the most omitted taxes... 'She isn't a natural presenter Amanda from Yorkshire Farm... Throughout the house, the dining table, the garden and bedroom furniture are all computer-generated too. The listing was a hit and hundreds of people wrote comments, joking that the listing was like a computer game. The house is described as being 'brand new' and has 'carpet throughout and a separate lounge' , a well-designed kitchen two bedrooms, a bathroom and an outdoor space that is landscaped. All furniture was photographed. However, the photos aren't as clear - with fake computer-generated photos all across the garden and home 'Wanna play sims?' one person said. Another said, The metaverse exists now. He had a friend who knew someone who could make it cheaper ...' He joked about one. Reminds me of the nightmare I've experienced in which I'm trapped in a swimming pool or a burning house and have no escape. Karma for how I treated my Sims 20 years ago,' wrote another. Comes with NFT furniture, said one. The living room was decorated with the bright red couch, a the cartoon fireplace and a TV. The dining table, the garden, and bedroom furniture were computer-generated. Real estate agent LJ Hooker, who listed the property, admitted that it was a 'inside job. Minecraft servers Realtor Mary Aidonas told Yahoo News Australia that it was her little fake furniture', and said she was not an expert in graphic design, but she 'gave it a go'. Is this something you've learned from Minecraft or Minecraft?' Another person inquired. Real estate agency LJ Hooker, who listed the property, admitted that it was an inside job. Realtor Mary Aidonas told Yahoo News Australia she was referring to it as her 'little fake furniture' and said she was not an expert in graphic design, but gave it a go. 'It is taken from Paint, the brand new Paint and you can pick furniture, and so that is what came up, she said. The house was ridiculed as looking like a 'early noughties video game' and people likening it to Sims and Minecraft The entire home is covered with fake furniture, which includes odd signs, fire places and numerous sofas. I stretched it out and thought, oh it looks alright at the time, and I thought we might get some exposure for it, since it's been inactive for so long.' She appears to have taken the criticism in good faith, however she said there's no thing as 'bad press'. I didn't know it was going to get this kind of response. She responds, Someone has already emailed me, why does the furniture appear to be something from a videogame released in the early 2000s? Well, maybe that's the source of the application from.' Earlier this month, real estate agent Property Gurus South Australia left people on the internet in awe with its bizarre photoshopping. The four-bedroom brick home was advertised by the agent in Elizabeth Downs, North Adelaide for $350,000. Property Gurus South Australia, an agent for real estate that has left people stunned by its bizarre photoshopping earlier this month. The agent advertised the brick house with four bedrooms in Elizabeth Downs (north Adelaide) for $350,000. The listing went viral on the internet, with house hunters mocking the poor Photoshopping of the property's lush front lawn and back yard. That's the latest strain of grass called 'Chernobyl', you should see it at night time,' a house-hunter said - referring to the Ukrainian town where a nuclear power station collapsed in 1986.

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