Skip to content

Posted on June 15, 2025 By Admin No Comments on

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.”

 

The Princess Diana Prediction Mystery

Princess Diana wearing an elegant white hat with red trim and matching white outfit with red geometric details looks directly at the camera with her characteristic gentle smile. Her blonde hair frames her face as pearl earrings catch the light, capturing the beloved royal's timeless grace and beauty that captivated the world before her tragic death in 1997.
Credit: Unsplash

One of the Japanese Baba Vanga’s most widely cited predictions involves the death of Princess Diana. Supporters claim she wrote “Diana? Died?” in her diary on August 31, 1992, exactly five years before Diana died in a car crash on August 31, 1997. However, an examination of her original 1999 manga comic shows the word “DIANNA” faintly printed in the background of a single panel. There is no confirmed evidence that this diary entry ever existed, and this vague reference was believed by many as a prophecy after Diana’s death. This example makes it clear that if something is unclear, people might later say it was a “prediction” once things play out.

Ryo Tatsuki Predictions: What The Scientists Say

A conceptual illustration shows Earth with the Americas visible, accompanied by seismic wave patterns and concentric circles emanating from a central point. This scientific imagery represents the sophisticated monitoring systems and geological data that real earthquake experts use instead of dream-based predictions.
Credit: Pixabay

 

Earthquake experts rely on scientific instruments and geological data rather than dream journals to predict disasters. Japan’s Meteorological Agency continuously monitors seismic activity and has issued no warnings for July 2025. Japan’s Cabinet Office explained that “modern technology has yet to be able to accurately predict an earthquake.” Real predictions require detecting precursor signals such as unusual seismic swarms, ground deformation, or changes in underwater volcanic activity, none of which are currently present. While Japan sits in the earthquake-prone Pacific Ring of Fire, genuine predictions require years of data analysis and advanced monitoring technology. The absence of official warnings from credible authorities should reassure travelers and investors alike.

The Reality of Dream-Based Predictions

A busy Japanese street scene at dusk shows pedestrians walking between tall buildings adorned with bright neon signs and colorful advertisements. The lively urban atmosphere captures the vibrant, safe reality of modern Japan that contradicts the fear-mongering surrounding unscientific disaster predictions.
Credit: Unsplash

The fear surrounding the Japanese Baba Vanga’s July 2025 prediction demonstrates how misinformation can inflict real economic harm. Social media myths and misunderstood claims have largely built her reputation as an accurate prophet, despite little evidence supporting it. Imposters fabricated many predictions attributed to her, copied content from novels, or referenced events that had already occurred. Even Tatsuki herself urged people not to be “overly swayed” by her dreams and to “act appropriately based on expert opinions.” People should consult official scientific authorities before making major decisions based on prophecies. Legitimate government sources and earthquake monitoring agencies confirm that Japan remains safe to visit. Fear may spread faster than facts, but facts ultimately provide the most reliable foundation for our decisions.

Loading

Uncategorized

Post navigation

Previous Post: Previous Post
Next Post: The new parents noticed that their dog sat by the crib every night without moving — so they decided to…

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archives

  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025

Categories

  • Uncategorized

Recent Posts

  • I was seven months pregnant when the parking guard called: “Ma’am… you need to see your car.” I ran downstairs and froze—my SUV was destroyed, and carved into the door were the words: “HOMEWRECKER” and “BABY TRAP.” Then the security video played… and I heard myself whisper, “Brittany?” My husband’s voice hit my phone: “Elena, don’t call the cops—please.” I smiled. “Too late.” But what he didn’t know? This was just the beginning.
  • Why Pets Love Sleeping in Your Favorite Spot
  • I never mentioned to my mother-in-law that I’d inherited a $30 million company from my grandfather. But the day after the wedding, she appeared at my door with a notary—smiling like she’d already won—and tried to pressure me into signing everything over. She thought I was a naive heiress. She didn’t know my grandfather’s will had a hidden trap. I gladly picked up the pen. Then the front door opened, and my husband’s reaction…
  • My husband’s “best girlfriend” ruined our gender reveal. Before I could even announce our baby’s gender, she spoiled it—and clung to my husband as if I didn’t exist. I looked at him. He ignored me completely. So I walked away in silence, already preparing to teach them the most unforgettable lesson of their lives.
  • I never told my parents who my husband really was. To them, he was just a failure compared to my sister’s CEO husband. I went into labor early while my husband was abroad. Labor tore through me, and my mother’s voice was cringe. “Hurry up—I have dinner plans with your sister,” I asked my father to call 911, but he just indifferently read the newspaper. In the most helpless moment of my life, I was completely alone—until a helicopter landed.

Recent Comments

  1. A WordPress Commenter on Hello world!

Copyright © 2026 .

Powered by PressBook WordPress theme