Yes I know. But it was listed as a one bedroom house, which it decidedly is not.
Yes I know. But it was listed as a one bedroom house, which it decidedly is not.
If this is their holiday property, I feel bad for them.
I’m honestly not sure what the typical asking price is for a changing booth, but it’s definitely not a one bedroom house.
It’s a changeing shed listed as a one bedroom house for £25,000. I’m not sure what’s reasonable about that.
There’d be an inevitable moment where you get up in the night for a glass of water, walk into the family room, and just see a blackened Elvis staring up at you.
I didn’t realise what community this was at first and was very concerned about OP!
I didn’t play the remake because of the name changes. I still have my Gamecube copy and the PS2 special edition, so will probably go back to those next time nostalgia bites.
This is true! It just needs a sacred tree and a few triskellions to complete the look.
I feel like whoever buys this should turn the garden into a satanic shrine, just to balance things out.
To be fair, you could probably fix this up quite nicely if you had the money (assuming it’s not listed).
This is a library for people who don’t read.
This looks about average for a new build council home…
As much as I hate to admit it, 2001 was 22 years ago now…
I’m not OP, but I feel like I want to add on to this if that’s alright. I think it’s often easy to get into this mindset when a trend seems to overtake a lot of the industry. For instance, personally I’ve noticed a common game that seems to get churned out a lot in recent years: it’s open world, but has nothing in it and is given light RPG elements that don’t really add anything. That doesn’t mean every game is like that, of course, but I think it can be easy to fixate on what we’re tired of seeing. Eventually, someone will come up with a new trend, and the empty open world games will fade out, and the cycle will continue as it always has. It’s also interesting to point out that humans tend to remember the past more fondly, so it’s easy to remember old gems and ignore the flops. Anyway, thanks for entertaining my ramble.
I heard this once back in 2011 while driving alone through the country at night. Just a weird, pulsing hum. Then it vanished just as quickly as it started. It’s funny that people have been studying it for so long and still have no idea what causes it.