A weird optical illusion has got people seriously confused as to whether they see a beach or a car.
At first glance it's defo a beach...but then after a few seconds you can't help but see a car.
Take a look for yourself:
The resurfaced image has got people stumped for years and one minute you see a moody beach, the next, it's the bottom of a car door.
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It seems that if you stare at the photo long enough it might make you question reality.
One just didn't have a clue what was going on, writing: "I can see both and my mind is confused."
Another person's mind was elsewhere, asking: "Who else thought it was the moon?"
A third person must have been looking at something else, saying: "Am I the only one that saw two snakes?"
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Your answer is yes, my friend.
The picture was posted to Twitter previously and also appeared on a Reddit thread, with people all over the internet trying to make sense of what they were looking at.
One person wrote: "Holy s**t I could only see the beach and didn't know what I was supposed to be looking at," while another added: "There's even a ship in the distance, what the f**k?"
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Thankfully TikToker @HecticNick has cleared things up once and for all, we think.
As shown in the clip above, the TikToker reveals that it is actually the bottom of a rusty car.
A similarly strange optical illusion occurred last year when a number of 'absolutely bizarre' blue swirls filled up the sky in New Zealand and have been baffling the locals ever since.
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'Look, up in the sky, it's a bird, it's a plane, it's...mysterious blue swirls...'
Well, the rather spectacular, yet random, sight took place on Sunday 19 June 2022, up in the sky over Nelson and travelled 750km south to Stewart Island by 7.30pm.
What genuinely looked like something from a Star Trek film was actually believed to be something caused by a man's space junk, which is basically a dying rocket - and not what you were thinking, you dirty bugger.
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It turned out that the rocket belonged to Elon Musk's SpaceX company after they launched their third rocket flight in 36 hours – a Falcon 9 rocket carrying a Globalstar DM15 satellites.
The company tweeted: "SpaceX hauled a Globalstar communications satellite into orbit early Sunday from Cape Canaveral, pulling off the third Falcon 9 rocket flight in 36 hours, the fastest sequence of three missions by any commercial launch company in history."
Topics: TikTok