The ālivingĀ Baba Vangaā has predicted a catastrophic event in July 2025 that could impact millions.
The legacies of famous seers like Nostradamus and Baba Vanga endure, long after their deaths in 1566 and 1996, respectively.
Supporters claim their forecasts included major world events, such as the Great Fire of London, the rise of Adolf Hitler, the September 11 attacks, and even an attempt on Donald Trumpās life.
Though Baba Vanga has passed, her influence hasnāt waned.
In fact, her predictions for 2025 are as bold as ever ā ranging from alien encounters to a war in Europe, and even Formula 1 icon Lewis Hamilton clinching his eighth World Championship with Ferrari.

Now, another mystic figure has entered the spotlight: Ryo Tatsuki, often dubbed the āJapanese Baba Vanga.ā
Tatsuki is stirring global concern with her prediction of a catastrophe expected to strike in July 2025.
Originally a manga artist, Tatsuki has gained a following for her dreams, which she has chronicled since the 1980s.
Her 1999 manga, āThe Future I Saw,ā details several of her visions ā some of which appear eerily aligned with real-world events.
One notable instance is her dream titled āMarch 2011 Great Disaster Comes,ā which many now associate with the devastating Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami of March 11, 2011.
More recently, she warned of a ācatastrophicā event in July 2025.
Her dream reportedly depicted a āboilingā ocean and an impact zone shaped like a diamond, covering areas around Japan, Taiwan, Indonesia, and the Northern Mariana Islands.
She also described dragon-like forms heading toward this region, imagery some speculate could represent visual patterns tied to seismic activity near Hawaii and other coastal zones.
Tatsuki claims this coming disaster could be āthree times biggerā than the 2011 tsunami, which resulted in nearly 20,000 deaths.

Although experts fromĀ Times New WorldĀ maintain thereās āno scientific basis for Tatsukiās claims,ā seismologists have acknowledged that the geographic region she references isnāt far off from areas known for geological instability, such as the Pacific Ring of Fire and Japanās Nankai Trough.
These are zones capable of producing major underwater quakes and tsunamis.
Online reactions have been mixed.
One user on X (formerly Twitter) remarked: āPredictions arenāt certainties. But if thereās even a 1% chance of truth, better to prepare than panic.ā
Another added: āThatās chilling ā hope itās just a false alarm. Better safe than sorry, though.ā
Some have even compared Tatsukiās revelations to owning a supernatural āDeath Note,ā referencing the iconic manga where names written in a cursed notebook lead to death.