Taiwan employees win Halloween by dressing up as everyday people in predicaments

Relatable.

Mandy How| November 02, 2020, 06:21 PM

Follow us on Telegram for the latest updates: https://t.me/mothershipsg

Covid-19 has put a damper on Halloween celebrations in many countries.

But not for Taiwan, who has gone 200 days with no locally-transmitted cases as of Oct. 29.

Employees from a Taiwanese company have been grabbing attention online with their costumes, which ironically feature everyday people in various predicaments.

The winning formula is a niche, yet relatable situation that most of us would have found ourselves in at some point of our lives.

The costumes

Woman who can't find a seat at the food court:

Photo via 一个阿呆仔/Weibo

Woman learning to apply make-up:

Photo via 一个阿呆仔/Weibo

Mentally exhausted Starbucks employee working on Halloween and being forced to smile at customers:

Photo via 一个阿呆仔/Weibo

Character who just got dumped in a Japanese drama:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

A person picking out their hair colour at the salon:

Photo via 一个阿呆仔/Weibo

A person walking past the infrared camera for temperature-taking:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

Someone who's loading:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

Someone who's forgotten to zip their backpack:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

Girls who go to the gym to post it on Instagram:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

A man who has gotten a vasectomy being "surprised" by his pregnant wife:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

Someone who has received a call from their boss to "make a small amendment" while on vacation:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

Woman whose stylist went away while she's about to get her fringe cut:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

Somebody who's still playing Animal Crossing:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

Woman who carelessly got her skirt tucked in her undies:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

Boyfriend waiting for girlfriend outside the toilet while they're out shopping:

Photo via Tony Lin/Twitter

Creative.

We deliver more stories to you on LinkedIn

Top image via Tony Lin/Twitter, 一个阿呆仔/Weibo