Minnesotans are roasting the can design for its glaring inaccuracies.

In early January, Busch Beer launched its limited-edition can design for Busch Light Snow Day. The can features a fairly common Minnesota winter scene -- anglers ice fishing on a frozen lake.

While the scene isn't necessarily supposed to be set in or implied to be Minnesota, Minnesotans familiar with ice fishing have been quick to mock some of the scene's more glaring discrepancies. "Anyone else see the problem with this picture?" asked Reddit user u/DutchVanDutch, setting off a firestorm of snarky replies online.

(If photo above does not show refresh page or click here)

"Fisherman is using a open water pole. No one is blatantly drinking. They're actually catching fish. There are mountains in the background?" listed off Redditor Bovronius.

"Trees grow in ice," joked another, referring to the pine trees seemingly growing out of the same ice the shanties are placed on.

"There are trees growing on the lake ice," seconded another.

"Waders, open water rod, mountains, a tad bit more," listed off Dazedlogicanimates.

"They took some clip art of a dude Summer fishing in a river," cracked another, also referring to the angler's waders.

"No one ice fishes with a summer fishing pole!" noted one Redditor.

"Fish houses clearly don’t have the proper identification: MN DNR number or name and address in two inch high letters," joked CyrogenicFishSlayer. "Call up the conservation officer!"

"Ya got 3 people fishin the same hole," observed one.

"He's not wearing shorts?" cracked Pirate-Andy.

Some in the Reddit post's comment section have incorrectly attributed the inaccurate can design to Duluth's Wild State Cider. The design, however, can be found on the new Busch Light limited edition can.

See the full comment thread on Reddit here.

LOOK: Best Beers From Every State

To find the best beer in each state and Washington D.C., Stacker analyzed January 2020 data from BeerAdvocate, a website that gathers user scores for beer in real-time. BeerAdvocate makes its determinations by compiling consumer ratings for all 50 states and Washington D.C. and applying a weighted rank to each. The weighted rank pulls the beer toward the list's average based on the number of ratings it has and aims to allow lesser-known beers to increase in rank. Only beers with at least 10 rankings to be considered; we took it a step further to only include beers with at least 100 user rankings in our gallery. Keep reading to find out what the best beer is in each of the 50 states and Washington D.C.

 

15 Signs You Might Be a Minnesota Grandma

More From 1390 Granite City Sports