A new prophecy from Japan’s self-proclaimed clairvoyant and manga artist Ryo Tatsuki — often referred to as the “Japanese Baba Vanga” — has captured the internet’s attention. Known for turning her dreams into comic book stories, Tatsuki has issued a chilling warning of an enormous tsunami she believes will hit in 2025, stirring widespread concern and debate online.

Ryo Tatsuki gained fame not just for her art but for her uncanny habit of predicting future disasters through her dreams. She initially entered the public eye as a manga artist, but her reputation shifted when readers began noticing that her dream-based comics eerily mirrored real-world events.

In 1999, she published a manga titled The Future I Saw, based entirely on her dream journal. Over the years, many fans revisited the work, claiming it accurately predicted several major incidents, which led to a cult following.

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New Prophetic Warning For 2025

In a more recent update to The Future I Saw, Tatsuki describes a haunting new vision involving a catastrophic tsunami. According to her, the ocean south of Japan begins to “boil,” and “giant bubbles” rise within a diamond-shaped area encompassing the Northern Mariana Islands, Indonesia, Taiwan, and Japan.

She described the sea south of Japan bubbling and boiling, with large air pockets rising — a sign she believes points to a massive underwater volcanic eruption. She warns this could trigger a mega-tsunami, potentially three times stronger than the 2011 disaster, threatening coastal regions of Japan, Taiwan, Indonesia, and the Philippines. The danger zone she outlined forms a diamond-shaped area connecting these nations with the Northern Mariana Islands. Her dream also featured two dragon-like figures heading toward the region, resembling formations she later identified on underwater maps near Hawaii — intensifying her concerns.

She claims that the resulting tsunami will be three times larger than the one that struck Japan in 2011, which claimed nearly 20,000 lives. This latest vision has raised alarm bells, especially due to Japan’s geographic vulnerability as part of the Pacific Ring of Fire — an area notorious for intense seismic activity.


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