‘Japanese Baba Vanga’ Foresees Catastrophic Event in July 2025 Affecting Millions

Fear spreads faster than facts in our digital age. Ryo Tatsuki, a former manga artist, has millions worried about a July 2025 tsunami based solely on her dreams. Travel bookings to Japan have dropped sharply, with some agencies reporting declines of up to 50 percent, already dealing a heavy blow to the country’s travel sector. The 70-year-old artist says the ocean south of Japan will “boil,” causing a huge tsunami that could hit many Asian countries. But before you change your vacation plans, remember there is no scientific evidence to back up her prediction. Sometimes, dreams are just dreams.

Who Is Ryo Tatsuki?

Ryo Tatsuki, a 70-year-old former Japanese manga artist, sits at a wooden desk drawing comic panels with focused concentration. Wearing glasses and a burgundy sweater, she works with a black pen on her manga artwork, surrounded by bookshelves that reflect her decades-long career creating the prophetic stories that would later make her famous as Japan's answer to Baba Vanga.
Credit: India.com

Ryo Tatsuki used to be a Japanese manga artist who started having strange dreams about disasters in the 1980s. She started to record these dreams in a personal diary and published them as a comic book called “The Future I Saw” in 1999. The book got little attention until 2011 when Japan suffered a massive earthquake and tsunami in March. People remembered her book mentioned that exact month, making her famous overnight. Now 70 years old, people call her Japan’s new version of Baba Vanga, after the legendary Bulgarian mystic who accurately predicted world events like 9/11 and Princess Diana’s death before dying in 1996.

The July 2025 Prediction Explained

Massive ocean waves crash with tremendous force, their white foam and spray captured mid-motion against a dark, stormy sky. The turbulent seawater demonstrates the kind of devastating tsunami power that Ryo Tatsuki claims will strike the Pacific region in her controversial July 2025 prediction.
Credit: Pexels

The Japanese Baba Vanga describes seeing the Pacific Ocean south of Japan bubbling like boiling water in her latest dream. She believes this vision points to an underwater volcanic eruption that will trigger a mega-tsunami. According to her, the disaster would strike a diamond-shaped area covering Japan, Taiwan, Indonesia, and the Northern Mariana Islands. She claims the tsunami will be three times worse than the 2011 disaster that killed over 18,000 people in Japan. Tatsuki published this warning in a revised edition of her book in 2021. The prediction has since spread quickly on social media, fueling fear among potential travelers.

Travel Industry Feels the Impact

Empty airport terminal seating faces large windows overlooking busy tarmac operations, with aircraft and ground vehicles visible outside. The vacant chairs reflect the sharp decline in travel bookings to Japan as tourists cancel trips due to widespread fear over the predicted disaster.
Credit: Pexels

The economic fallout from Tatsuki’s prediction is already being felt, despite the lack of scientific evidence behind it. CN Yuen, managing director of WWPKG travel agency, reported that “bookings to Japan dropped by half during the Easter holiday” and are expected to dip further in the coming months. Travel agencies across Asia say customers are canceling or postponing trips scheduled for July 2025. Some tourists are adjusting their vacation plans to avoid the predicted disaster zone altogether. Airlines and hotels in the region are already reporting financial losses. Anxieties provoked by these prophecies have become “ingrained,” with people saying they “want to hold off their trip for now.”

Examining Ryo Tatsuki “Track Record”

A Japanese manga book cover features dramatic artwork of a concerned woman's face alongside newspaper clippings and text in red and black. The title reads "私が見た未来 完全版" (The Future I Saw Complete Edition) with a bold red banner claiming major disasters will come in July 2025, showing how Ryo Tatsuki's predictions have been packaged and marketed.
Credit: Mai Takiguchi/CNN

Tatsuki’s reputation comes from claims that she predicted several major disasters through her dreams. Supporters say she foresaw Freddie Mercury’s death in 1991, the 1995 Kobe earthquake, Japan’s 2011 tsunami, Princess Diana’s death in 1997, and even the COVID-19 pandemic. These alleged forecasts have given her credibility among believers, many of whom now take her 2025 tsunami prediction very seriously. After 2011, her book became a highly sought-after collector’s item, with copies commanding premium prices online. Social media has amplified her reputation, framing her as a reliable prophet to millions of followers around the world.

The Reality Behind Her “Accurate” Predictions

 A detailed 3D rendering of the coronavirus structure shows the characteristic spike proteins in red protruding from the gray viral surface. This scientific visualization represents one of the false predictions wrongly attributed to the manga artist through social media misinformation campaigns.
Credit: Unsplash

A closer look reveals that misinformation and misunderstandings have built Tatsuki’s reputation more than actual predictions. An impersonator posted her widely circulated COVID-19 “prophecy” on Twitter in 2020, not Tatsuki herself. That account had lifted its content from Dean Koontz’s 1981 novel The Eyes of Darkness. Many of the events she’s credited with predicting had already occurred by the time she published her book in 1999. Critics say her visions are “too vague to be taken seriously.” Social media hype and retroactive interpretation have largely created her so-called “accurate track record.”

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