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The Future I Saw by Ryo Tatsuki (我所看見的未來,龍樹諒) - 5 July 2025 Prediction


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The prediction appears in 龍樹諒 Japanese manga published in 1999, The future I saw(我所看見的未來). the author 龍樹諒 drew about a disaster she saw in her dream. 

 

The date of the disaster is supposely 5 July 2025.


The prediction seems to have taken a life with reported dropped in bookings to the region
Even main stream media are reporting the doomsday prediction.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/06/19/japan-manga-tourists-ryo-tatsuki/
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/may/26/japanese-manga-earthquake-prediction-travel-bookings-japan
https://edition.cnn.com/2025/05/19/travel/japan-trips-canceled-fortune-tellers-comic-book-intl-hnk

https://tw.news.yahoo.com/7月5日將發生大災難-漫畫-我所看見的未來-衝擊日本旅遊-013027941.html

https://mothership.sg/2025/06/the-future-i-saw-manga/

 

 

 

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  • HendryTan changed the title to The Future I Saw by Ryo Tatsuki (我所看見的未來,龍樹諒) - 5 July 2025 Prediction
4 hours ago, Naveyafluz said:

It's just next week, hopefully it will not happen.

 

There's a tarot card reader in Hong Kong who predicted that the massive earthquake is now delayed/postponed to August/September instead.  If you understand Cantonese, you can watch her reasoning & "the why's" here on this TVB programme, You Are Not Alone.

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As mentioned by some of the videos above, Ryo Tatsuki self published a book Tenshi no Yuigon (天使の遺言) on 15 June 2025. It also helps to clarify some of the rumors attributed to her manga.


We used AI to summarise the Japanese book. Into English.

________________________________________________________________

📘 Overview

Title: Tenshi no Yuigon (天使の遺言)
Author: Ryo Tatsuki (竜樹 諒)
Publication Date: June 15, 2025 (self-published via Bungeisha) amazon.co.jp+5crazyforanimetrivia.com+5cdjapan.co.jp+5


🔍 Key Themes & Purpose

  1. Autobiographical honesty
    Tatsuki recounts her life story—from childhood, formative experiences (like a turning-point traffic accident), to her evolution as a manga artist and dream diarist. The narrative is deeply personal and reflective amazon.com+1en.wikipedia.org+1.

  2. Addressing controversies
    She clarifies misunderstandings surrounding her previous work, Watashi ga Mita Mirai (“The Future I Saw”). This includes tackling misinformation about fake versions, exaggerated prophecies (such as Mt. Fuji erupting in August), and media-fueled rumors amazon.com+5en.wikipedia.org+5crazyforanimetrivia.com+5.

  3. Exploring prophetic dreams & spiritual moments
    The book dives into several of her so-called “predictive dreams” and spiritual experiences, such as:

  4. Controlling messaging around July 2025 prophecy
    Tatsuki explicitly distances herself from literal interpretations of her “July 2025” warning in The Future I Saw. She explains the date was highlighted by marketing, not meant as a precise prophecy—she emphasizes the date symbolizes when humanity might "wake up" to looming danger, prompting deeper preparedness note.com+8zh.wikipedia.org+8thestandard.com.hk+8amazon.com+4crazyforanimetrivia.com+4babel.ua+4.

  5. Encouraging preparedness over panic
    Recognizing the anxiety stirred by her earlier works, she urges practical disaster readiness—building “psychological and material” resilience (e.g., stockpiling water and cash), rather than succumbing to fear .


📘 Content Highlights

  • Past life & inspiration: Reflections on upbringing, the traffic accident, starting a dream diary, and volunteerism .

  • Behind-the-scenes of The Future I Saw: Insight into editorial conflicts, misleading rumors, and how marketing shaped the public narrative .

  • Clarifying misinterpretations: Detailed account of confusing dates (e.g. “July 5, 2025”) in her dreams versus actual disasters babel.ua+2crazyforanimetrivia.com+2amazon.com+2.

  • Spiritual sketches: Two short manga-style pieces, interwoven with dream-inspired spiritual reflections.

  • Final message: A call to focus on truth, mindfulness, and compassionate preparation—interpreting prophetic dreams symbolically, not deterministically .


📝 Why It Matters

  • Restorative truth: Tatsuki reclaims her voice from sensationalism and rumor, clarifying her real intentions bloomberg.com+7crazyforanimetrivia.com+7babel.ua+7.

  • Humanizing a “prophet”: She presents herself not as a prophetess but as a human who uses dream art to reflect and warn with humility.

  • Bridge to conscious living: The book encourages readers to live consciously, heed spiritual signs, and build resilience—without fueling fear.


In essence, Tenshi no Yuigon is a heartfelt memoir that peels back the layers of myth around Ryo Tatsuki—revealing the real person, her dreams, and her true message: to awaken awareness, support one another, and prepare wisely in a world full of uncertainties.

 

 

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