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‘Japanese Baba Vanga’ Predicts July 2025 Mega-Tsunami — Warns Of ‘boiling Sea’ South Of Japan

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‘Japanese Baba Vanga’ Predicts July 2025 Mega-Tsunami — Warns Of ‘boiling Sea’ South Of Japan

There is a significant market for future prediction, regardless of your opinion. Although Baba Vanga passed away in 1996 and Nostradamus in 1566, respectively, their legacy endures. These purported mystics gained notoriety for seemingly foretelling events, with their followers asserting that they did so for anything from 9/11 to the Great Fire of London, from Adolf Hitler to the assassination attempt of Donald Trump.

Many people still think Baba Vanga has a lot in store for us, even after her passing. She has foreseen encounter with extraterrestrial life, a catastrophic battle spanning Europe, and even Lewis Hamilton winning an unprecedented eighth World Championship with Ferrari in 2025 alone.

After discussing the ‘Living Nostradamus’ and his predictions for the future, let’s move on to Athos Salomé, since the Japanese Baba Vanga is about to arrive. We should pay attention to Ryo Tatsuki, who has established herself as a contemporary Baba Vanga, as she has predicted a massive tsunami in 2025.

According to Ryo Tatsuki, the massive tsunami is predicted to strike South Japan in July 2025. Try your best Parker Posey imitation in The White Lotus. Since the 1980s, Tatsuki has been recording her prophetic dreams, which have earned her notoriety.

Tatsuki began his career as a manga artist and has since developed a reputation as a soothsayer. Her admirers have been contrasting her visions with actual happenings since she produced a manga book titled The Future I Saw in 1999, which detailed her predictions.

Source: Wikipedia

In particular, her “March 2011 Great Disaster Comes” dream seemed to eerily foreshadow the March 11 Great East Japan Earthquake. The Future I Saw also ominously described “a new virus peaking in 2020 and returning a decade later,” which some attribute to the coronavirus pandemic. Looking at July 2025, Tatsuki warns of a ‘boiling’ ocean, with some thinking she’s predicting an undersea volcano that will cause a mega tsunami. She writes about a ‘catastrophic’ July 2025 event that will be three times bigger than the 2011 tsunami. Her dream reportedly showed her a diamond-shaped area between the Northern Mariana Islands, Indonesia, Taiwan, and Japan.

She also describes seeing dragon-like things moving in that direction; this imagery is connected to patterns of sight around Hawaii and other coastlines that are considered vulnerable.

Given that Japan is located close to the Pacific Ring of Fire, Tatsuki’s predictions aren’t as implausible as some may believe.

Massive undersea volcanoes that are predicted to explode in 2025 are nothing new, after all.

Japan is also positioned by the Nankai Trough, which experts say is capable of causing an earthquake and tsunami. As reported by Times New World, seismologists reiterate that while there’s “no scientific basis for Tatsuki’s claims”, they added that “the location she describes isn’t far-fetched from a geological standpoint.”

Many people on X weren’t sure how to interpret the forecasts. If true, a Japanese mega-tsunami could impact hundreds of millions.

One cautious person wrote: “Predictions aren’t certainties. But if there’s even a 1% chance of truth, better to prepare than panic.”

Another added, “That’s chilling—hope it’s just a false alarm. Better safe than sorry though.”

Someone else concluded, “This prediction certainly raises concerns about disaster preparedness in the affected regions. It’s crucial for governments to have plans in place to ensure public safety.”

Numerous people asserted that this Japanese Baba Vanga contains the “Death Note”, alluding to the well-known manga in which a high school student owns a diary that possesses the supernatural power to murder anyone whose name appears in it.

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With over a decade of experience in digital journalism, Jason has reported on everything from global events to everyday heroes, always aiming to inform, engage, and inspire. Known for his clear writing and relentless curiosity, he believes journalism should give a voice to the unheard and hold power to account.

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