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Sydney Rental Ad is Brutally Mocked Online after Bizarre Photoshopping

A Sydney rental listing for a home with two bedrooms was mocked online due to the use of "cartoon furniture".
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The house on Belmore Street in Rozelle has turned into a laughing matter after the Domain listing was shared on Facebook page Humans of Eastwood Daily

The house is described by the seller as "brand new" with carpet throughout, and a separate living space and a tidy kitchen, two bedrooms and bathrooms.

A rental advertisement for two-bedroom house in Sydney was slammed on the internet for using 'cartoon furniture'

After the advertisement was posted on Facebook by Humans of Eastwood Daily, the house at Belmore Street in Rozelle became an unpopular item

But the photos reveal a different story, with the photos showing fake furniture created by computers all over the home.

In the living area there is a bright red couch, with a cartoon fireplace, and television.

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In the home, the dining table, garden and furniture for bedrooms are all computer generated too.
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The post went viral and hundreds people commented, joking that it was like playing a computer game.

The house is described as 'brand new' with 'carpet throughout' with a 'separate lounge' , a well-designed kitchen, two bedrooms, a bathroom, and a landscaped courtyard. The furniture was taken from photoshopped

However, the photos tell a different story - with the snaps showing fake computer generated images all across 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 make it cheaper ...' He joked about one.

"Reminds me about my nightmare in which I am trapped in a pool , or a burning house with no way out. Another wrote, "Karma for how I treated Sims 20 years ago."

"Comes with NFT furniture," said one.

The living room was decorated with a bright red couch with the cartoon fireplace and a TV. The dining table, garden, and bedroom furniture were computer-generated.

Real estate agency LJ Hooker, who listed the property, admitted that it was a 'inside job. 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 from Minecraft or Minecraft?' Another person inquired.

LJ Hooker, a real estate agent, listed the property and admitted it was an inside job.

Mary Aidonas, a realtor, said to Yahoo News Australia that it was her little fake furniture. She said she wasn't an expert in graphic design, but gave it a try.

She said, "It is from Paint. The new Paint. You can choose furniture. So that's what came up."

The house was ridiculed as looking like a video game' with people talking about it as Sims and Minecraft

The entire house is adorned with fake furniture, which includes odd signs, fire places, and multiple sofas.

'I stretched it out and I thought, "oh it looks alright" at the moment, and I thought we might get some exposure for it because it's been in a state of dormancy for many years.'

She appears to take the criticism in good faith, however, saying there's no such thing as "bad press".
Servers

I didn't realize that it would receive this kind of response.

Someone has already emailed her, "why does the furniture appear to be from a video game released in early 2000s."

"Well, maybe that's where the application came from."

In the last month, real estate agency Property Gurus South Australia left internet users in stitches over its bizarre photoshopping. The agent advertised a four bedroom brick house in Elizabeth Downs, north Adelaide , for $350,000

Property Gurus South Australia, a real estate agency, left internet users shocked by its bizarre photoshop earlier this month.

The agent advertised the four bedroom brick home in Elizabeth Downs, north Adelaide for $350,000.

The advertisement went viral online, with house hunters mocking the poor Photoshopping of the home's lush front lawn and back yard.

"That's the new variety of grass called 'Chernobyl'. you should observe it at night,' said one house-hunter - referring to the Ukrainian town where a nuclear power station was destroyed in 1986.