Japanese manga creator Ryo Tatsuki, widely referred to as “Japan’s Baba Vanga,” has sparked global concern with her latest prediction of a virus far more devastating than COVID-19. Known for accurately predicting the 2020 coronavirus pandemic years in advance, Tatsuki’s warnings about future global catastrophes are once again being widely discussed on social media.
Tatsuki’s predictions are based on her dreams, which she documented in her 1999 manga book, The Future I See. In this book, she wrote that an unknown virus would emerge around 2020 and peak in April, a prediction that proved chillingly accurate. She is also credited with foretelling major events such as the death of Princess Diana, the passing of singer Freddie Mercury, the 1995 Kobe earthquake, and other major natural disasters in Japan.
According to her followers, Tatsuki’s predictions operate on a strict 15-year cycle. Her latest warning points to a massive global pandemic expected to strike in 2030. If the event does not occur in 2030, her cycle suggests the threat could shift another 15 years to 2045. Although the book does not provide specific scientific details about the nature of the virus, it warns of a catastrophe capable of engulfing the entire world, leaving many deeply anxious about what lies ahead.