A customer at a pizza store gained attention after sharing that they received an unfinished pizza via a food delivery platform.
Online user Kram (@instakramm) shared on X (formerly Twitter) that they received pizza dough with sauce from Lots’a Pizza via GrabFood.
“So ano, kami na bahala mag-oven? Pakipadala naman ng ibang sahog,” Kram wrote on Saturday, June 13, along with emojis of a loudly crying and a rolling-on-the-floor laughing face.
Ordered a Pizza from @lotsapizzaPH via Grab and received this 😭 So ano kami na bahala magoven? Pakipadala naman ng ibang sahog 🤣 pic.twitter.com/Po32LWbgYB
— Kram ✧ (@instakramm) June 13, 2026
The post has earned 15,000 likes, 1,100 reposts and over 100 replies.
Kram also responded to some comments, saying they only wanted a “snack.”
He added that the pizza store eventually sent the correct order, but by then, they were already “very hungry.”
“We didn’t get any compensation, although when we reached out right after seeing this, they replaced it naman ng kung ano talaga dapat (which took another while). Then they took back the dough. ‘Di ko na alam kung matatawa ba or maiinis ako, hahahaha,” Kram shared with another online user.
He also posted a video of the pizza dough they received as further proof.
Something about the shadow can sit properly now pic.twitter.com/rUC8artMBu
— Kram ✧ (@instakramm) June 13, 2026
Kram said the pizza store is their “go to pizza place,” adding that it is “affordable” and “delicious.”
“Ewan ano nangyare today,” he wrote with a smiling-face-with-tear emoji.
Meanwhile, Kram’s post amused other online users, who shared their reactions.
“Hahahahahahaha, damiii ko tawaaaaa!!!! Create your own pizza pala atake nila,” an X commented.
“HAGSHAHHAHAH, Cooking Mama ang atake,” another wrote.
Pizzas are usually made starting from dough, followed by tomato sauce as the base before adding toppings.
Earlier this month, some Threads users shared of similar experiences after ordering from a bakeshop and an overseas online store.
RELATED: What they ordered vs. what they got: Threads users recount viral service blunders







