>>16495807The brand was Monster, by the way. I was just too shy to check the flavor by whatever was written on the can and decided to buy it quick. Just wanted to have an energy drink. I didn't expect to get as unlucky as possible.
And there was an orange can there, I think. So, was it wrong of me to assume that the ORANGE can has the ORANGE flavor, not the white one? I guess so.
Also, I did try to look at the flavor on the white one after I bought it, but all I saw were advertisements for PUBG mobile and gave up. It really isn't my fault, it's just absolute bogus presentation.
What if you were going to a store because you felt like having some gummies, and it turned out that all the packs for the gummies in the store were completely white bags that you couldn't tell any of the flavors from? So, you couldn't figure that a pack of blueberry gummies were blueberry gummies from just looking at it. You would just have to buy one of the gummies, and hope for the best.
That's what happened to me. That shouldn't be the case. The flavors of the drinks should be very clearly displayed on the can. If it's orange flavored, then have it be painted orange. If it's melon or something, have it be melon colored. Just why not? Is this not basic common sense?
Do they have to paint their cans white, because it just looks cool or something? What does that have to do with anything when you're buying an energy drink? Especially when it comes at the cost of potentially misleading people.
And even if you were going for the cool factor, it's not as if it anyone gives a single fuck about the color. It's Monster. It looks cool because of their logo and stuff. Nobody cares for what color the cans are, right? They could just have every single one be black, because that's what people mainly recognize them for. But with big text telling you what the flavor is, or does that go against the cool factor?
This is just fucked up. I imagine that this has messed over a lot of people, not just me.