An individual in Japan, often compared to the famous Baba Vanga, has released a frightening warning about a potential disaster anticipated for July of this year.
Baba Vanga, originally Vangeliya Pandeva Gushterova from Bulgaria, gained fame for allegedly foreseeing several significant events during her lifetime.
It has been widely circulated that she predicted the tragic passing of Princess Diana in 1997 as well as the devastating 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, among other incidents.
As is often the case, these predictions rarely bring good news.
Though Vanga passed away in 1996, Japan now appears to have its own seer with similarly unsettling predictions.
Ryo Tatsuki, a former manga artist and current fortune teller, claims her predictions are revealed to her through vivid dreams, a phenomenon she says began in the 1980s.
In 1999, the 70-year-old Tatsuki published a manga titled The Future I Saw, which was based on some of her most extraordinary dreams.
Recently, interest in her book has surged as readers draw parallels between her predictions and actual global occurrences.
Currently, Tatsuki has issued a dire warning concerning an upcoming event this July. She predicts the ocean will start ‘boiling’ south of Japan, potentially leading to a disaster for the region.
This dream is widely interpreted as a potential undersea volcanic eruption substantial enough to initiate a ‘mega tsunami’.
As the name suggests, Tatsuki forecasts that this tsunami will have a massive impact area, capable of causing widespread destruction across Japan, Taiwan, Indonesia, and the Northern Mariana Islands.
She has also mentioned seeing ‘dragon-like shapes’ approaching the area, though experts advise skepticism, stating there is ‘no scientific basis for Tatsuki’s claims’, as reported by Times Now News.
Tatsuki retired in 2020, likening it to her ‘own funeral’ in 1995—not in the literal sense, but as a metaphor for the conclusion of her career as a manga artist, as noted by Medium.
Regarding her past ‘predictions’, she is said to have accurately foreseen the death of Freddie Mercury in 1991 and the catastrophic Kobe earthquake in 1995.
She is also credited with anticipating the Covid-19 pandemic, an event that few could have foreseen.
Tatsuki wrote: “In 25 years, an unknown virus will come in 2020, will disappear after peaking in April, and appear again 10 years later.”
For the sake of Japan, there is hope that this latest prediction does not come true.