A woman who has been hailed as Japan’s own Baba Vanga has a bleak prediction for July that’s sparking people to cancel their trips.
Baba Vanga is world-renowned for her often bleak but accurate predictions about the world, despite having passed away in 1996.
The late Bulgarian mystic accurately predicted major events such as the 9/11 attacks and the d,eath of Princess Diana. But there’s another person who has been making accurate predictions about our future, and that’s Ryo Tatsuki.
Tatsuki is a manga artist and in 1999 released her book called The Future I Saw. In it, she detailed visions that she’d had, some of which have come true.
It’s thought that one of Tatuski’s most accurate predictions to date was a major disaster in March 2011. This date ended up being the same time that Japan was hit by a cataclysmic quake and tsunami in northern Tohoku region.
The devastating ordeal claimed the lives of over 18,000 people.

It’s believed that the artist also accurately predicted the death of Freddie Mercury and the 1995 Kobe earthquake.
A ‘complete edition’ on Tatsuki’s book was published in 2021, and it’s here that she warned of another devastating event that will take place in July 2025. This event is predicted to take place in Japan and will supposedly hit the country on July 5.
Tatsuki has warned that ‘a crack will open up under the seabed between Japan and the Philippines, sending ashore waves three times as tall as those from the Tohoku earthquake’, CNN reports.
In the best-selling book, it also details Japan’s oceans ‘boiling’, which some have interpreted to be a sign of pending a volcanic eruption from underwater.
The disaster is drawn to have its epicenter as a diamond-shaped region that links Japan, Indonesia, Taiwan and the Northern Mariana Islands, says The Macao News.

As a result of Tatsuki’s prediction, people are reportedly canceling their trips to Japan our of fear of being there when the disaster hits.
Speaking to CNN, CN Yuen, managing director of WWPKG, a travel agency based in Hong Kong, explained that bookings to Japan dropped by 50 percent over the Easter break — a figure that’s expected to drop even further over the next couple of months.
People’s concerns were further exacerbated when the Chinese embassy in Tokyo issued a warning about natural disasters in Japan last month.
In its warning, the embassy told those who were living in or planning on travel to Japan to take extra precautions against natural disasters, South China Morning Post reported.
Source: unilad.com