The 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Final Fantasy hype train rolled on this week as 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Crisis Core Reunion launched on Tuesday. Early reactions to the game appear to be largely positive, but some eagle-eyed players have noticed a detail that really took them out of the moment. A Getty Images watermark on an in-game painting that appears multiple times.Spotted by , the image can be found during chapter eight of the remastered 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Final Fantasy 7 title. On the wall inside a Shinra mansion is a black and white painting of a mildly busy street complete with horses and carts and a few people milling about. However, what stands out most is the plain-as-day watermark left right in the middle of it. To make matters worse, this isn't the only place you can find said painting. It's up on the wall three ꦦtimes and yes, the watermark is present in all three instances. After doing a little digging, Kotaku managed to unearth the actual painting through . Painted by John Crowther, the image is of a Lon♏don street and was created all the way back in 1881.
Whoever decided it would be the perfect image to pop on a Shinra mansion wall cropped out the bulk of the painting's sky, stretched it to fit the frame, added a black and white filter, and then popped it up on the wall. Well, actually, multiple walls. What they neglected to do is remove the watermark. While not confirmed nor denied by 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Square Enix, that also implies the studio didn't pay to use the image. If it had done then a version without the watermark would hav🐷e been u꧙sed.
If you want to check out the watermark for yourselves, you now know where to find it. You'll want to act fast though as now people have spotted it, word will have already gotten back to Square Enix and it will be scrubbed from the game before you know it, and before a potential lawsuit is spun from it. Also, keep your eyes peeled for more Final Fantasy news as the series celebrates 💧its 35th ann♔iversary this week.