
A Japanese manga appeared to make another dire prediction as a magnitude 8.8 earthquake triggered tsunami warnings across the Pacific Ocean.
Nearly two million people have been evacuated amid fears that waves could reach nearly 10 feet high after 900 earthquakes struck an archipelago off the coast of Japan.
Beaches were deserted as people sought shelter on higher ground, many hiding on the roofs of buildings, while waves were already seen on the northern island of Hokkaido.
Meanwhile, the tremors and sea waves were predicted by Ryo Tatsuki, a Japanese version of Baba Vanga, who recorded 15 dreams she had in the 1990s, many of which came true.
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She predicted a “great catastrophe” on July 5, 2025, although she made her prediction somewhat ahead of schedule.



They were published in a 1999 manga titled Watashi ga Mita Mira, known in English as The Future I Saw.
She gained fame for her eerily accurate predictions, including the coronavirus outbreak and the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami that killed nearly 20,000 people in Japan.
“It's really scary to even fall asleep,” one local told regional television channel MBC. “It feels like it's shaking all the time.”
Tatsuki, 70, wrote in her diary that she dreamed that “a crack opened under the seabed between Japan and the Philippines, causing waves three times higher than those from the Tohoku earthquake to crash onto the shore.”
Sourse: metro.co.uk