Madame Tussauds is immensely popular all over the globe because fans are obsessed with celebrities. Who wouldn't love the opportunity to take a selfie with Ariana Grande or pose next to James Bond (well, one of the six at least)?

RELATED: Why Were Pierce Brosnan's Wax Figures Removed From Madame Tussauds Museums?

The problem is that not all of Madame Tussauds wax figures are as jaw-droppingly lifelike as fans would hope. Well, or as lifelike as the designers behind the creations would hope, either. The celeb-filled museum is famous for its figures, and they commemorate big moments in Hollywood, like creating the first-ever celeb kid feature in an exhibit a few years back.

Somehow, Madame Tussauds' process isn't always on point, and the museums wind up with wax figures that are so bad, they're borderline offensive. Celebs like Ariana Grande have literally called the museum out for its flubs — the singer simply wrote "I just wanna talk" in the comments of Madame Tussauds' 'Classic Ari' reveal on Twitter, noted W Magazine.

While Ariana Grande's fans were upset on her behalf, and clearly shared her frustrations over the awkward figure, that's not the absolute worst interpretation of an artist that fans have seen at Madame Tussauds.

Nope, that honor goes to the museum's attempts at recreating Queen Bey. As Paper Mag highlighted in a rundown of all the times Tussauds has offended the songstress, somehow they just can't. do. Beyoncé. justice.

The problem might lie in Beyoncé's above-average looks and overall "uniquely iconic" appearance, says Paper. They reason that more generic celebs might come out OK in wax, but that the Queen is hard to dial in.

The thing is, fans have plenty to complain about, since Madame Tussauds has rolled out countless Bey statues over the years. Collectively, they're the worst fans have seen.

Some statues "whitewashed" the singer, and that was bad enough. The figures are meant to be realistic, after all. But then, there was the 'club-going' Beyoncé who looked like a very poor impersonator. Also, her undies were showing. Paper called that particular statue "janky" and pointed out the lack of accuracy overall.

Then there was a 2014 version of Bey that looked pretty good, but Madame Tussauds photographed her in a field full of geese. Just, what?

And in 2017, Delhi had a passable statue, so fans held their breaths.

And then, redemption. As Paper explained, after Bey was "crudely, brutally rendered" multiple times over the past ten or so years, one Tussauds location finally got it [sorta] right.

The London locale finally nailed their Beyoncé rendition, and fans breathed a sigh of relief. Only, they're still hoping the remaining janky wax figures have since been melted down.

NEXT: Beyonce Once Bought Jay-Z A Jet For $40 Million, But What Did He Buy Her In Return?