It isn't a scene out of a fairytale,Rajni Bhabhi 2.0 (2023) Hindi Short Film it's a soccer game in East Malaysia.
This image of a court, used for a modified version of soccer known as futsal, has quickly gone viral, reaching some 14,000 likes on social media.
SEE ALSO: 2 professional soccer players vs. 30 kids is a surprisingly close matchIt was posted onto the Facebook page of Harimau Malaya, a club for soccer supporters in Malaysia, sent in by a teacher from the Longongon school, where the court is located, in the town of Nabawan.
According to the post, the teacher said that the court was "intentionally left that way so as to avoid the heat of the sun and to provide fresh air."
Social media users were impressed by the image.
"This is so beautiful ... its green and leafy ... I can almost smell the fresh air there," said one commenter on Harimau Malaya's Facebook post in Malay.
"I didn't know there was an area in the world which looked like dinosaurs could still be roaming," another added.
"You know, if you lose your ball here, you'll never ever find it again," one user rightly pointed out.
But your ball isn't the only thing that might get lost. The futsal court itself is pretty inaccessible, if you couldn't already tell that from the image. It takes about three hours to get to the school from Nabawan's main town, according to a report by The Star.
The school is some 80km (about 50 miles) away from the main town, and the route is inaccessible when it rains.
"You have to drive two hours on rugged terrain and then cross a river, which takes another hour," says the Facebook post. "From the school, its a walk of about 15 minutes through hilly terrain to get to the futsal court."
Idyllic. And they don't have to worry about an overcrowded court.
Survey: AI experts' minds were blown by 2023's AI developmentThe U.S. Government site hosting Jeffrey Epstein documents has crashedStaff Picks: Rats, Rereaders, and Radio Towers by The Paris ReviewRedux: SelfWhat We Aren’t Seeing by Francine ProseHow to enable Link History on FacebookSomething to Hold On To: An Interview with Rumaan Alam by Cornelia ChanningThe Origins of Sprawl by Jason DiamondMicrosoft announces 'Copilot key' for easy AI access on Windows PCs'Foe' review: Saoirse Ronan and Paul Mescal can't save this empty sciRedux: Leaves Fall Off of the Trees by The Paris ReviewCelibacy is all the rage on social media. Here's why.The best part of 'Foe' is how the world is endingDear Building Residents by Lee ConellRedux: The Things between Me and Time by The Paris ReviewThe Art of Distance No. 24 by The Paris ReviewOn Threads, users say they're flooded with proBest winter clearance sales: Amazon, Target, Best Buy, and WalmartNYT's The Mini crossword answers for January 5A Modernist Jigsaw in 110 Pieces by Michael Hofmann Making a Claim on Language: A Conversation with Adania Shibli by Max Weiss Multiple Worlds Vying to Exist: Philip K. Dick and Palestine by Jonathan Lethem from Lola the Interpreter by Lyn Hejinian James Baldwin in Istanbul by Osman Can Yerebakan What I Want to Say About Owning a Truck by J. D. Daniels Wild Animal Tales by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya Baking Gingerbread Cake with Laurie Colwin by Valerie Stivers On An African Abroad by Toye Oladinni The Last Day of His Life by J. D. Daniels The Cookbook Review by The Paris Review Sleep Diary by Rosa Shipley The Prom of the Colorado River by Meg Bernhard On Mohammed Zenia Siddiq Yusef Ibrahim’s BLK WTTGNSN by Benjamin Krusling Anne Imhof’s Talent Show by Liby Hays Fifth Sleeper: Gérard Maillet by Sophie Calle The Erotics of (Re)reading by Peter Szendy Windows and Doors by Laurie Stone Rabelaisian Enumerations: On Lists by Andrew Hui A Certain Kind of Romantic by Edward Hirsch Prof. Dr. A. I. in Conversation with Tadeusz Dąbrowski by Piotr Czerski
2.4045s , 10112.703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Rajni Bhabhi 2.0 (2023) Hindi Short Film】,Unobstructed Information Network