Oasis have excited fans by teasing an upcoming announcement ahead of their world tour in 2025.

The rock band posted photos to social media of billboards in various cities which show brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher together with the headline “be careful what you wish for”.

In the caption, the group said the announcement will be made at 8am Eastern Time on Monday and added #OasisLive25.

The Britpop group announced their reunion last month following a long-standing feud between Liam and Noel after the band split in 2009 – prompted by a backstage brawl at the Rock en Seine festival in France.

The brothers, from Manchester, will reunite for their first UK show since their split at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium on July 4.

The band will then return to Scotland for the first time since 2009, where they will play three nights at Murrayfield in Edinburgh in August.

The last time the duo performed together was in 2009 at V Festival in Staffordshire.

Oasis’s string of 19 UK and Ireland dates have all sold out, including two extra Wembley shows, which sparked a furore over ticket sales and inflated prices.

The band have ruled out returning to Knebworth Park “in the future”, along with any plans for more dates in the UK.

The upcoming announcement comes following speculation about potential additional international locations the band will visit next summer as part of the world tour.

The band said they were unaware that dynamic pricing, which led to some standard tickets more than doubling from £148 to £355, was going to be used on Ticketmaster, and blamed the situation on “unprecedented demand”.

It also prompted the Government and the UK’s competition watchdog to pledge they would look at the use of dynamic pricing.

Ticketmaster has previously said it does not set concert prices and its website states this is down to the “event organiser” who “has priced these tickets according to their market value”.

Other fans were angry and disappointed after being left empty-handed, having battled website issues, being mislabelled as bots and waiting in an online queue for hours to buy tickets.

This year marks 30 years since the band released their debut studio album, Definitely Maybe, which sailed to the top of the UK charts earlier in the month, bolstered by the release of a deluxe edition celebrating its anniversary.

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