Facts 01/08/2025 23:14

Japanese “Baba Vanga” Meme Resurfaces After July 2025 Tsunami Triggers Alerts

Ryo Tatsuki: The Eerily Accurate Manga Artist Who Might Just Be the Next Great Seer

It may be time to pay closer attention to Ryo Tatsuki—a name that has recently resurfaced in both psychic circles and the public’s imagination. The 70-year-old Japanese manga artist has long been dubbed the "new Baba Vanga" due to her seemingly prophetic dreams, and now, one of her most chilling predictions appears to have come true, once again raising questions about her uncanny foresight.

While many might raise eyebrows at the idea of a manga artist being compared to the famed Bulgarian mystic Baba Vanga, Tatsuki’s growing list of eerily accurate predictions has made even skeptics pause. Among her most shocking claims: foreseeing the death of Queen’s iconic frontman Freddie Mercury, the emergence of the coronavirus pandemic, and the catastrophic 2011 earthquake and tsunami that devastated Japan’s Tohoku region.

But perhaps most startling is her vision of a massive disaster in southern Japan—a prophecy that now feels chillingly close to reality. And with recent seismic activity shaking the Pacific region, people are beginning to wonder: Was Tatsuki’s nightmare vision a warning we all ignored?


The Mysterious Prophet Behind the Manga

Ryo Tatsuki began recording her dreams in 1985, a habit she started after receiving a notebook from her mother. But unlike ordinary dreamers, her dreams were vivid, detailed, and disturbingly prophetic. She later turned these visions into manga form, sharing them with the world through her 1999 book The Future I Saw. Far from fictional storytelling, this work laid out scenarios that seemed outlandish at the time—but have increasingly mirrored real-world events.

In a 2021 reprint of her manga, Tatsuki shared one particular dream that she had while asleep—one in which the ocean floor split open, unleashing chaos across the Pacific. Her words, once dismissed by many as speculative fiction, now read like a grim forecast.


The 2025 Warning That Shook the Internet

In The Future I Saw, Tatsuki issued a stark warning: “The ocean floor between Japan and the Philippines will crack. Huge waves will rise in all directions. Tsunamis will devastate the Pacific Rim countries.” She predicted that the tsunami would be three times higher than the one that struck Japan in 2011—an event that left thousands dead and many more displaced.

She even pinpointed the date: July 5, 2025. And while the recent earthquake and tsunami occurred roughly 25 days later, on July 30, the magnitude and location were close enough to stir concern—and draw massive online attention to her earlier predictions.

In response to the unfolding events, several Pacific Rim nations, including Japan, China, the Philippines, Chile, New Zealand, Indonesia, Peru, Mexico, and parts of the U.S., began tsunami preparations. Waves exceeding five feet have already hit Hawaii, and experts warn the risk may linger for days.

Dave Snider, tsunami warning coordinator in Alaska, explained, “A tsunami is not just one wave. It’s a series of powerful waves over a long period. They travel at jet-plane speeds in deep ocean, but slow down and build up when nearing shore—this is when the real danger starts.”



Public Reaction and Travel Chaos

As soon as Tatsuki's predictions began circulating again, public response was swift. Flight cancellations to Japan surged, with NDTV reporting an 83% drop. Hong Kong-based travel bookings fell by 50% compared to the previous year, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

Despite official efforts to control the narrative—such as Miyagi governor Yoshihiro Murai dismissing the predictions as “unscientific rumours”—it was clear that many people were rattled.

Still, Tatsuki herself expressed discomfort with how her work was being publicized. Speaking to The Sankei Shimbun, she clarified, “I was unhappy that it was published primarily based on the publisher’s wishes. I vaguely remember mentioning it, but it appears to have been hurriedly written during a rush of work.”

Nonetheless, her reluctance hasn’t diminished the attention or belief from fans and watchers of her prophecies.


Social Media Reacts: A Modern-Day Nostradamus?

In the wake of the recent earthquake and tsunami, social media erupted with mentions of Ryo Tatsuki. Users across platforms like X (formerly Twitter) posted comments ranging from amazement to concern.

“Can we talk about Ryo Tatsuki accurately predicting that this tsunami would happen in July 2025 in her manga? That’s insane,” wrote one user.

Another added, “The prophecy is coming true! Ryo Tatsuki already predicted this!” Others noted that even though her prediction was off by a few weeks, the month matched, and the magnitude was eerily close.

Some skeptics still point out that the exact date didn’t align—but as history has shown, even imprecise forecasts can have a lasting psychological effect, especially when they come from someone with a track record like Tatsuki’s.


A Future We Should Heed?

Whether Ryo Tatsuki truly possesses supernatural foresight or is simply a creative mind who intuits patterns the rest of us miss, her warnings are becoming harder to ignore. From a manga page to a global warning, her visions have stirred a sense of unease—and awe.

As climate change and tectonic instability continue to make the future more unpredictable, perhaps it wouldn’t hurt to take such visions a bit more seriously. After all, as the recent tsunami shows, the world isn’t always prepared for what’s coming. But sometimes, someone is watching… even if only in their dreams.

News in the same category

News Post