One café in Qingdao, Shandong Province, is under fire for a picture-perfect promise that turned out to be a visual illusion.
Promoted online with captions like “Not Italy, It’s Qingdao” and “Feels Like a Mediterranean Lemon Town,” the newly opened café drew attention on lifestyle platform Xiaohongshu for its dreamy photos of a sunlit seaside setting, complete with blue skies and a blooming lemon tree — evoking the charm of southern Europe.
But the reality was far from the virtual postcard.

A popular Chinese content creator, known for reviewing trendy cafés, visited the location in high hopes — only to find that the much-hyped “lemon seaview” was actually a printed mural on the wall. There was no actual lemon tree or sea view, just a cleverly staged indoor photo spot.
“Who can explain this phenomenon?” she asked in disbelief, sharing her disappointment on Xiaohongshu. Her post quickly went viral, sparking waves of sarcastic commentary from netizens.
“It’s not Italy — it’s an AI-generated image used to fish for likes,” one user mocked.
“Who would even build houses that close to the sea? When the tide rises, everything would flood,” another joked.
Some were so disillusioned they said they felt like reporting the café to authorities.
The incident serves as a stark reminder that not everything we see on social media is as picture-perfect as it seems — and that a viral photo can sometimes be just that: a photo.

