Japanese ‘Baba Vanga’, who predicted princess Diana’s death, 2011 tsunami, has made another shocking prediction for July 2025, mega disaster in…
Some people become well-known not for their professions, but for their eerie ability to foresee events before they happen. Throughout history, names like Nostradamus and Baba Vanga have stood out for making predictions that, to many, seem shockingly accurate — and sometimes unsettling.
Now, a new name from Japan is gaining attention online — not a psychic or astrologer, but a former manga artist.
Who is Ryo Tatsuki?
Ryo Tatsuki used to be known for her work in the world of manga (comics or graphic novels), but today, she’s recognized more for her unusual dreams than her drawings. Since the 1980s, she’s been experiencing vivid dreams that she believes show future events. She began recording them in a dream journal, and in 1999, she released a manga titled “The Future I Saw”, based on those visions.
According to a report by The Times of India, several of the events she dreamt about actually happened, which is why people are now paying close attention to her most recent predictions.
Predictions that came true
One of her earlier dreams was in 1991, when she saw a vision involving Freddie Mercury, the legendary frontman of rock band Queen. A few months later, Mercury sadly died from AIDS-related complications.
In 1995, Tatsuki had a dream about a devastating earthquake — this turned out to be the Kobe earthquake in Japan, which took over 6,000 lives.
However, her most talked-about prediction came in 2011. She had recorded in her journal that something terrible would happen in March 2011. That month, Japan was hit by the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, which also triggered the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
Back in 1992, Ryo had a strange and vague dream about a woman she couldn’t fully recognize. The dream wasn’t very clear, but something about it unsettled her. When she woke up, she quickly jotted down a note in her diary: “ダイヤナ?死んだ?” — which means “Diana? Died?” in English. She also sketched the image of the woman from her dream. That entry was made on August 31, 1992. Shockingly, exactly five years later, on August 31, 1997, Princess Diana tragically lost her life in a car crash in Paris.
Ryo also made a chilling prediction about a global health crisis. In her diary, she wrote something to the effect of: “In 25 years, a mysterious virus will emerge in 2020. It will hit a peak around April, disappear for a while, and then return 10 years later.” Her timeline was eerily accurate — the COVID-19 pandemic broke out globally in early 2020, peaked in many countries around March–April, and while it later subsided.
Ryo Tatsuki’s chilling new dream: Mega-tsunami in July 2025?
Ryo Tatsuki has now shared a disturbing new vision — this time about a huge disaster she believes could strike in July 2025. In her latest dream, Tatsuki saw the sea south of Japan bubbling and boiling, with large air pockets rising from the ocean — something she interprets as a sign of a major underwater volcanic eruption. According to her, this could trigger a mega-tsunami, possibly three times more powerful than the 2011 disaster that devastated Japan.
She fears that Japan’s coastal areas, along with the Philippines, Taiwan, and Indonesia, could be in danger.
What’s more chilling is the location she described: a diamond-shaped region connecting Japan, Taiwan, Indonesia, and the Northern Mariana Islands. In the same dream, she saw two dragon-like figures moving toward this area. Later, she found similar shapes while looking at underwater maps near Hawaii, which deepened her concern.
What are scientists saying?
As of now, there is no scientific evidence that such a tsunami will occur this year. However, experts point out that Japan is located on the Pacific Ring of Fire, one of the most seismically active zones in the world. Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and tsunamis are relatively common here.
A particularly risky area is the Nankai Trough, where geologists say a massive earthquake is overdue. If it happens, it could cause a tsunami over 30 metres high — something eerily close to what Tatsuki saw in her dream.
While her prediction has yet to be backed by science, the accuracy of some of her past dreams is why many are now paying close attention to what she has to say.
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