Is The World Ending On July 5? Japanese 'Baba Vanga' Predicts Tsunami, Sparks Panic Before 'Disaster Date'

"An undersea rupture between Japan and the Philippines. Waves taller than buildings. Millions at risk."

That's what Ryo Tatsuki, a little-known manga artist from Japan, predicted decades ago for July 5, 2025. Now, with just days to go, social media is in a frenzy over her so-called "Doomsday Drawing". What's fuelling the alarm is the 5.5 magnitude earthquake that hit off the Tokara Islands of Japan in the Kagoshima Prefecture around 3:30 PM on Wednesday.

Who is Ryo Tatsuki — The 'New Baba Vanga'?

Nicknamed the "new Baba Vanga", Tatsuki gained cult status after publishing a 1999 manga called "The Future I Saw" featuring handwritten predictions. Her followers claim she accurately foresaw:

  • The death of Princess Diana
  • The 2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami
  • The COVID-19 pandemic
  • And now—a mega-tsunami on July 5, 2025

The chilling part? She allegedly stopped making predictions after 2025, stating that her "visions" had come to an abrupt end.

What Exactly Did She Predict For July 5?

According to a panel in her manga, "an underwater eruption will devastate Japan and trigger a massive tsunami", specifically between the Philippines and Japan. The image has resurfaced across TikTok, X (formerly Twitter), and Reddit.

  • #July5Disaster is trending globally.
  • Panic-led booking cancellations in Tokyo and Okinawa are being reported.
  • Tourists are asking for refunds citing "omen fear".
  • Flights have also been cancelled, as reported by various news websites.

One viral X post reads: "Tatsuki was right about COVID. I'm not taking any chances. Cancelled my trip to Osaka. #July5Disaster" Experts Say: "No Scientific Basis". Another X user said: "I went down the Ryo Tatsuki rabbit hole and I think we're seriously not ready for July 5, 2025. She predicted Covid, Diana, earthquakes — now she says a massive tsunami is coming."

Despite the viral fear, seismologists say there's no data indicating an imminent quake or tsunami in the region.
Japanese disaster expert Dr. Hiroshi Watanabe told NHK: "There is zero evidence. These are fear-driven social waves, not seismic ones."

Still, mental health experts are warning of "apocalyptic anxiety", especially among Gen Z and TikTok users.

Why It's Going Viral Again — And Why Now?

This isn't just an old story rehashed. It's catching fire now because:

  • July 5 is just around the corner
  • TikTok creators are making dramatic countdown videos
  • Conspiracy influencers are mixing this with other "doomsday" timelines (like solar flares, planetary alignments)
  • Google Trends also showed a spike in "July 5 tsunami" searches over the past week

Should You Be Worried?

No official agency — JMA (Japan Meteorological Agency), IMD, or USGS — has issued any tsunami warnings for July 5. But if anything, this saga is a case study in digital-age anxiety, where fiction meets fear and goes viral. Also, no tsunami warning was issued after Wednesday's 5.5 earthquake in Japan.

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