Sydney Rental ad is Brutally Mocked Online after Bizarre Photoshopping



A Sydney rental listing for a home with two bedrooms was brutally mocked online due to the use of 'cartoon furniture'.



The house located on Belmore Street in Rozelle has been a laughing stock since the Domain listing was made public on the Facebook. Humans of Eastwood Daily



The house is described as 'brand new' and has 'carpet throughout with a separate lounge' as well as a neat kitchen, two bedrooms, a bathroom and an outdoor space that is landscaped.



A rental advertisement for two-bedroom homes in Sydney has been brutally mocked online for using 'cartoon furnishings'



After the advertisement was posted on Facebook by Humans of Eastwood Daily, the apartment on Belmore Street in Rozelle became a laughing stock



However, the pictures tell a different story - with the photos showing fake furniture created by computers throughout the house.



In the living room , there is a bright red sofa with an animated fireplace, as well as television.



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Throughout the house The dining table, garden and furniture for bedrooms are all computer generated too.



The now viral listing had hundreds of users commenting that it was like playing a computer game.



The house is described by the seller as being "brand new" and features 'carpet throughout'. It also comes with a separate living room' and a neat kitchen, as well as two bedrooms, and bathroom. The furniture was all photographed.



The images however reveal a different story. They show fake photographs taken by computers all over the home and garden.



'Wanna play sims?' one person said.



'The metaverse is now in the process of being created,' said another.



'He had a mate who knew someone who could do it cheaper ...' joked one.



'Reminds me of that nightmare I have where I'm stuck in a swimming pool or a burning house and have no escape. Another wrote, "Karma for how I treated Sims 20 years ago."



"Comes with NFT furniture," said one.



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



LJ Hooker, a real estate agent who listed the property, admitted it was an 'inside job. Mary Aidonas, a realtor said to Yahoo News Australia that it was her own fake furniture. She admitted she was not an expert in graphic design, but she gave the idea a go.



Is this from Minecraft or Minecraft?' Another person asked.



Real estate agency LJ Hooker, who listed the property, admitted that it was a 'inside job'.



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



She said, "It is from Paint. The latest Paint. You can choose furniture. That's what was revealed."



The home was jokingly described like a 'early nineties video game', with people likening it to Sims and Minecraft



The house is covered in fake furniture, which includes bizarre signs, and fireplaces, and numerous sofas



I stretched it out and thought, "oh it looks alright" at the moment, and I thought we could get some publicity for it, since it [the property] has been inactive for quite a long time.'



She appears to accept the reaction in good faith However, she claimed that there is no such thing as "bad press".



"I didn't know it would receive such a response.



She replies, "Someone has already emailed me, why does the furniture appear to be something from a videogame released in the early 2000s?"



"Well, perhaps that's where the application got it from.'



Property Gurus South Australia, an agency for real estate, left internet users shocked by its bizarre photoshopping earlier this month.Minecraft-servers-list The brick home with four bedrooms was advertised by the agent in Elizabeth Downs, North Adelaide for $350,000.



Property Gurus South Australia, an agency for real estate has left web users stunned by its bizarre photoshopping earlier this month.



The agent listed the four-bedroom brick home in Elizabeth Downs (north Adelaide) for $350,000.



The listing went viral online, with house hunters mocking the poor Photoshopping of the property's lush front lawn and backyard.



One house hunter said, "That's the new grass variety called Chernobyl You should be able to be able to see them at night," referring to the Ukrainian town which was the home of a nuclear power plant that was destroyed in 1986.