CELEBRATIONS chocolate fans have been left freaked out and said Christmas is ruined after opening their advent calendars.
The giant chocolate maker has angered Brits with its advent calendar this Christmas season.
Fans have complained that Celebrations have ‘ruined Christmas’[/caption]People were left devastated after spotting the Bounty chocolate in their calendars[/caption]With the Christmas countdown already here, chocoholics are opening the first day on their advent calendar today.
But Celebrations fans have seen their special day ruined after spotting an “unpleasant” surprise.
And it has caused people to have their Christmas “ruined”.
People were left fuming after finding the nation’s most divisive chocolate on December 1 – the Bounty.
The coconut chocolate has caused controversy for the past couple of years, with shoppers disappointed to find their least favourite chocolate.
One user posting on X, formerly known as Twitter, said: “A bounty as day one in the Celebrations advent calendar are you kidding me?”
Another disheartened fan said: “Celebrations advent calendar day one is a f***ing bounty. Are you kidding me?”
A devastated user added: “Did you start off with a Bounty in the Celebrations advent calendar too?”
“I opened the first door on my Celebrations advent calendar and I got a bounty,” a fourth slammed.
On previous years, fans were left disappointed to find two Bounty bars in the first three days of December.
One shopper vented on Twitter: “@UKCelebrations what’s the crack with bounties on the 2nd and 3rd? As if this Christmas wasn’t depression enough!”
While another added: “You ‘avin’ a laff @UKCelebrations??!! Two days in a row???!! [sic].”
And a third one said: “@UKCelebrations reeled me in giving a Maltesers on the 1st only to give back to back Bountys. I feel betrayed.”
Shoppers can snap up the Celebrations advent calendar at Sainsbury’s for £7.
It comes as Celebration fans rushed to buy boxes of their favourite sweets – to be in with a chance of winning £25,000 in time for Christmas.
The much-loved chocolates now contain blue tickets, much like in Roald Dahl children’s book Willy Wonka.
The nine-carat gold Bounty bar weighs one 1kg and was made by an expert jeweller in London.
If the winner holds onto the bar and the price of gold increases, then they could even increase their winnings.
There are also other cash prizes of £10,000 hidden in the qualifying Celebrations tubs, which can only be found at Tesco.
A box of Celebrations is currently the cheapest to buy at Tesco with the loyalty card for £4, next is Asda which is selling the chocs for £4.50.