Prophecies of the Coming Disaster

Two women. Two countries. One vision of July 2025.

Intro Prophetic Vision

Ryo Tatsuki (たつき諒)

The Woman Who Dreamed Disaster

She didn’t call herself a prophet. But her dreams came true.

In 1999, a quiet manga artist named Ryo Tatsuki (たつき諒) published a short dream journal titled 『私が見た未来』 (The Future I Saw). It was a collection of visions she claimed came to her in dreams — some symbolic, others terrifyingly precise.

At the time, it was obscure. A curiosity. A few strange stories illustrated with care.

Then came March 11, 2011 — and the tsunami.

Among the pages of her book, dated years before, was a sketch marked clearly: 「3.11」
A major tsunami in Northeastern Japan (東北地方).
Devastation. Death. Nuclear fallout.

It matched the exact date of the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami (東日本大震災), down to the region. Suddenly, people began asking: Who is this woman? How did she see it coming?

Over time, readers noticed something else. Her other predictions — Princess Diana’s death, the Kobe earthquake, even a reference to a “strange viral illness” around 2020 — had all come true.

Then, in 2021, she broke her silence. In a reprint of her manga, Ryo Tatsuki added one final postscript:

“The real great disaster is still ahead.”
「本当の大災難はこれから来るのです」

She gave a date:
July 2025
And a warning:

“A great explosion beneath the sea. Cities will be submerged.”
「海底の大爆発」「都市が水没する」

No more visions came after that.

This page exists because she was right before.
And she might be right again.

Ryo Tatsuki, the Manga Artist Who Dreamed Disaster

Ryo Tatsuki, the Manga Artist Who Dreamed Disaster

Who Is Ryo Tatsuki?

Ryo Tatsuki (たつき諒) was never a celebrity. She didn’t appear on talk shows, and she never claimed to be a psychic.

She was a manga artist — quiet, private, and almost anonymous — known only within small publishing circles in Japan. Born in 1954 in Kanagawa Prefecture (神奈川県), she spent most of her early adult life working as an illustrator and comic creator. Her style was simple, clean, and often autobiographical.

In the mid-1990s, something began to change.

“I began having dreams that didn’t feel like dreams.”
「夢とは思えない夢を見るようになったのです」

She started writing them down. Sometimes they came with images. Sometimes with exact dates. What unsettled her was not their emotion, but their precision — and the strange way they stayed vivid, even months later.

By 1999, she had compiled enough of these visions into a small, independently published manga. She titled it:
『私が見た未来』
“The Future I Saw.”

It wasn’t marketed. It wasn’t pushed. Just quietly placed on shelves by a niche publisher.

Ryo explained in her liner notes that she wasn’t trying to predict the future — only to record what she saw. She didn’t use spiritual techniques or any rituals. She wasn’t channeling. She just dreamed, remembered, and drew.

Shortly after publishing, she retired from public life.

For more than two decades, nothing more was heard from her — until 2021, when the manga was reprinted, and a new postscript was added with her final vision.

🧩 Her Method

Unlike clairvoyants or mystics, Ryo’s approach was startlingly ordinary:

  • No training in divination
  • No followers or movement
  • No effort to monetize predictions

She simply wrote what she saw. Her dreams came early in the morning, between 3 and 5 AM, and she described them as “extremely vivid” — like watching a film. Some visions repeated over the years until she drew them.

She kept a dream diary (夢日記), sketching scenes immediately upon waking. Many of the drawings in her book are rough — sketched with urgency, not beauty. But that’s what gives them their weight: they feel real.

📚 Publishing Details (for context)

  • Publisher: Takeshobo Co., Ltd. (竹書房)
  • First Edition: July 1999
  • Reprint Edition: October 2021
  • Original ISBN: 481245299X
  • Reprint ISBN: 9784801927802

Ryo Tatsuki did not try to be a prophet.

But the future came anyway.

About the Manga – The Future I Saw (『私が見た未来』)

In 1999, Ryo Tatsuki quietly published a manga unlike anything else on bookstore shelves. It wasn’t fiction. It wasn’t fantasy. It was a dream diary — illustrated and dated — containing visions she had experienced between the mid-1980s and late 1990s.

She titled it:
『私が見た未来』
The Future I Saw.

Inside, she wrote:

“These are not predictions. They are what I dreamed.”
「これは予知ではありません。私が夢で見たことです。」

📖 Format and Structure

The book is short — around 100 pages — and presented in a semi-autobiographical, comic-strip style. Each vision is explained with:

  • The date she saw it in her dream
  • A summary or interpretation
  • A rough illustration of the event
  • Her personal reaction or speculation

There is no mysticism, no ceremony — just ordinary narration paired with increasingly disturbing content.

Many entries include seemingly innocuous dreams, such as strange coincidences or symbolic encounters. But a few stand out. One shows a tsunami. Another mentions the death of a princess. Another shows a virus outbreak. All with eerily accurate timing.

⏳ Initial Reception (1999)

When it first came out in 1999, the book received little attention. It wasn’t considered prophetic — only strange. A dream manga. A curiosity. Sales were limited. The book went out of print quietly and was mostly forgotten.

But then came March 11, 2011. And the “3.11” page — printed years earlier — began circulating online.

People started searching for out-of-print copies. Prices spiked to tens of thousands of yen on auction sites. A forgotten comic suddenly felt prophetic.

🔁 2021 Reprint With Final Vision

Due to overwhelming demand and renewed public interest, Takeshobo reissued the manga in October 2021. The reprint was updated with:

  • A new afterword by Ryo Tatsuki
  • Several additional dreams not in the original
  • One final, terrifying vision:
    July 5, 2025 — a disaster unlike any before

She titled the update:
『私が見た未来 完全版』 (The Future I Saw: Complete Edition)

“The real disaster is still ahead.”
「本当の大災難はこれから来るのです」

The reprint sold out almost immediately. Within days, copies were out of stock across Japanese online retailers. For younger generations, it felt like a warning from the past — one that might be about their own future.

The Wave That Changed Everything: March 11, 2011

The Wave That Changed Everything: March 11, 2011

Fulfilled Prophecies

Some said they were just dreams — until they came true.

Ryo Tatsuki’s legacy rests on more than vague feelings. Two of her recorded visions — one printed years before the event, and the other eerily timed — match major global disasters. These are the strongest reasons many now take her July 2025 prophecy seriously.

🌀 A. The 3.11 Tsunami — March 11, 2011 (東日本大震災)

Among all her visions, none is more chilling — or better documented — than the one printed in her 1999 manga, showing a massive tsunami in Northeastern Japan.

  • Dream date: Early 1990s (exact year not stated, but pre-1995)
  • Published: July 1999 in The Future I Saw
  • Illustration: A wave, a date: 「3.11」

Text in panel:
“A terrible disaster will strike in Northeastern Japan in March.”
「3月、東北地方に大災害が起きる」

Twelve years later, the Great Tōhoku Earthquake struck on March 11, 2011, triggering a massive tsunami and nuclear meltdown at Fukushima.

This page from her manga went viral after the disaster. It was not vague. It was not added later. It was printed, dated, and public.

Why it matters:
This was not a symbolic vision. She wrote the exact date. She named the region. She even drew the wave.

For many in Japan, this page shifted Ryo Tatsuki from obscure dreamer to credible seer.

🦠 B. COVID-19 – “A Strange Illness” (2020)

Another entry — quieter but still unsettling — describes a vision involving a mysterious illness spreading worldwide.

  • Dream Date: Around 1995

Content:

“A strange new illness begins to spread in 2020... people struggle to breathe.”
「2020年、新しい奇病が広がる…人々が息が苦しくなる」

Symptoms mentioned: fever, respiratory problems, masks

Was it in the original 1999 edition?
→ Unclear. Some sources say it was added in the 2021 reprint as a retrospective note.

Still, the phrasing matches the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which began to spread globally in early 2020 and caused exactly those symptoms.

Why it matters:
Whether printed in 1999 or re-added in 2021, the vision was clear. Ryo Tatsuki claimed to have seen a respiratory illness disrupting the world in exactly the year it happened. That timing is enough for many to consider it another fulfilled prophecy.

⚰️ C. Princess Diana’s Death

One of Ryo’s dreams included the death of a famous woman loved by many, described as happening “suddenly, in a foreign tunnel”.

  • Dream Date: Mid-1997
  • Event: Princess Diana died in a car crash in the Pont de l’Alma tunnel in Paris, August 31, 1997

Dream content (translated):

“A beloved woman dies abroad, in a tunnel, and the world mourns.”
「愛された女性が外国のトンネルで亡くなり、世界が悲しむ」

Why it matters:
Though the dream was symbolic, the setting, timing, and global response all match.

🌍 D. Others with Partial or Local Fulfillment

There are scattered reports of other dreams involving:

  • The Kobe Earthquake (阪神淡路大震災, 1995)
  • A volcanic eruption in Japan (possibly referencing Mount Ontake or Sakurajima)
  • Economic shifts and political unrest

However, these are less clear and often lack precise dating. Still, they show a consistent pattern of visions tied to real-world upheaval.

Unfulfilled or Vague Prophecies

Dreams that didn’t come true — or haven’t yet.

While Ryo Tatsuki’s most famous predictions have gained attention for their accuracy, not every vision in The Future I Saw (『私が見た未来』) has clearly come to pass. Some appear symbolic, some may be misinterpreted, and others have passed their stated dates without incident.

This section gives a balanced view — not to diminish her record, but to show it honestly, as believers who also value truth.

🗓️ A. Events That Didn’t Happen on Time

In both the 1999 original and the 2021 reprint, several visions were assigned specific years. Some have already passed without fulfillment.

⚠️ Example:
Prediction: A volcanic disaster “worse than 1991’s Mount Pinatubo” by 2015
「2015年にピナトゥボ火山以上の噴火が起こる」
Status: No such eruption occurred

⚠️ Example:
Prediction: Major economic crisis in 2017 affecting both Japan and the U.S.
Status: While some market volatility occurred, there was no clear crash matching her description

Why it matters:
These visions had specific years attached, making them easier to measure. When no matching events occurred, they were seen by some as disconfirmed.

🌫️ B. Vague Symbolic Dreams

Several dreams are metaphorical or emotionally symbolic, making their interpretation unclear.

Example:
A dream showing a giant dragon coiled around Japan, with the text:
“Japan will be tested, but the dragon protects it.”
「日本は試されるが、龍が守る」
Interpretation: Possibly symbolic of spiritual pressure or a protective force — not predictive of a physical event

Example:
A crack in the sky pouring light over Tokyo
「東京に光が降る空の割れ目」
Status: No event has matched this imagery literally. Could represent mass awakening or a metaphor for consciousness change.

Why it matters:
These types of visions are open to interpretation — which means they can’t be proven or disproven, and may be better seen as messages, not forecasts.

📣 C. Fan Criticism and Skepticism

Not everyone in Japan accepts Ryo Tatsuki as a seer. On forums like 5ちゃんねる (5ch) and Twitter, common criticisms include:

  • Claims that the 3.11 panel could have been edited later (a claim repeatedly debunked by scan dates)
  • Accusations of “retrospective prophecy” — inserting fulfilled predictions into reprints
  • Doubts about her mental health or motives (especially after the 2021 reappearance)

Still, even most skeptics agree:

“If even one prediction was real, we can’t ignore the rest.”
「一つでも本当なら、他も無視できない」

🔍 Summary Table: Mixed Results

Date Mentioned Event Described Fulfilled? Notes
2011 NE Japan Tsunami (3.11) ✅ Yes Precise match, confirmed
2020 Viral pandemic ✅ Yes Close in timing and content
2015 Giant volcanic eruption ❌ No No major eruption that year
2017 Financial crisis ❌ No Minor events only
Various Symbolic dragon, sky crack, etc. ❓ Unknown Symbolic, not measurable

In short: some dreams missed, some may not have reached their time yet, and others may never be fully understood.

But those that matched — matched too closely to ignore.

Foretold Waters: The Last Vision Before the Tide

Foretold Waters: The Last Vision Before the Tide

July 5, 2025 — The Final Warning

“A terrible sea disaster will strike. Cities will vanish. The time is July 5, 2025.”
「2025年7月5日、大海難が起きる。街が消える。」

This is the prophecy that defines Ryo Tatsuki’s legacy — and it hasn’t happened yet.

First published in the 2021 reprint of The Future I Saw: Complete Edition (『私が見た未来 完全版』), this vision was not in the original 1999 manga. According to Ryo herself, it was a recurring dream that came to her several times over a span of years, growing stronger and more vivid each time.

📅 The Dream

  • Dream Date (seen): Not exactly stated, but she says the vision “persisted for decades”
  • Published Date: October 2021
  • Specific Date in Vision: July 5, 2025 (2025年7月5日)

Language Used in Manga:

  • “大海難” — Dai-kainan, a severe maritime disaster
  • “海底爆発” — Undersea explosion
  • “街が沈む” — Cities sink beneath the sea

This was the first and only time Ryo attached an exact date to a vision after the 3.11 tsunami. Her tone in the postscript was urgent:

“I do not know what causes it. I only know it happens.”
「原因はわかりません。ただ、起こるのは確かです。」

🌊 The Imagery

The manga shows a dark ocean swelling and then ripping open, with giant waves radiating outward. A map is roughly sketched — many believe it resembles the Japanese Pacific coast, though it is intentionally vague.

The caption reads:

“People must prepare. This cannot be stopped.”
「人々は備えなければなりません。これは止められない。」

In Japanese forums and TikTok videos, this page has been analyzed, redrawn, and compared to:

  • The 2011 tsunami map
  • Tectonic risk zones off the Nankai Trough
  • A possible Cascadia or Pacific-wide mega-quake scenario

🗾 Cities Mentioned (in manga captions and fan theories)

While Ryo does not give a precise list, fans and analysts have drawn connections to:

  • Tokyo Bay (東京湾)
  • Yokohama (横浜)
  • Osaka Bay (大阪湾)
  • Kagoshima, Kyushu (鹿児島)

One interpretation suggests the wave rises from the Philippine Sea Plate, striking the Japanese archipelago from the south — a pattern similar to the Nankai Megathrust.

📣 Public Reaction in Japan

After the 2021 reprint:

  • #私が見た未来 (#TheFutureISaw) trended multiple times on Twitter
  • Japanese YouTubers and manga critics began making full breakdowns of the July 2025 prophecy
  • A few regional newspapers mentioned the date, though usually in the “odd news” column
  • Meanwhile, sales of emergency goods, disaster kits, and go-bags rose in some regions

This prophecy — unlike any of her others — gave people a deadline.

🧭 Interpretation for Believers

For those who trust Ryo Tatsuki’s visions, July 5, 2025 is not a curiosity.

It is a fixed moment in the timeline — one that should be taken seriously. Not with fear, but with preparation. The specifics are unclear. But the warning is direct.

“I hope I am wrong. I truly do.”
「私の間違いであれば、どんなにいいか…」

Public & Cultural Impact

From ignored manga artist to underground prophet.

Ryo Tatsuki was not a celebrity. She didn’t appear on talk shows. She didn’t give lectures. In fact, for over a decade after her book was first published, she disappeared from the public eye completely.

And yet — by 2021, she had become a cult figure in Japan’s alternative spiritual circles. Not by self-promotion… but because the world began to catch up to her dreams.

📚 Obscure Release, Quiet Following

When The Future I Saw (『私が見た未来』) was first published in 1999, it was largely overlooked. Just another short manga by a relatively unknown illustrator.

But among a small group of readers — particularly those interested in dreams, synchronicity, and occultism — it stood out. The specificity of the visions, and their personal tone, gave it a haunting quality.

🌊 After 3.11: Rediscovered

On March 11, 2011, when the Great East Japan Earthquake struck, something extraordinary happened:

Readers opened their old manga copy… and saw the numbers: 「3.11」

That single page began circulating online, especially on platforms like 2ちゃんねる (2ch) and Twitter. Some dismissed it as coincidence. But others began tracking down copies of the manga to see what else was inside.

This moment marked the start of her prophetic reputation.

🔁 The 2021 Reprint: Viral Resurrection

In October 2021, publisher Takeshobo (竹書房) released a reprint called:

『私が見た未来 完全版』
The Future I Saw – Complete Edition

It included:

  • The original 1999 manga
  • A new postscript detailing her final dream: July 5, 2025
  • A full timeline of her dreams and when she saw them

Within days, the reprint sold out on Amazon Japan, Rakuten, and local bookstores. Second-hand prices spiked. YouTube creators made analysis videos with hundreds of thousands of views. Hashtags trended again.

📱 TikTok, YouTube, and the New Generation

Since 2022, younger audiences have discovered her work through:

  • Japanese TikTok creators summarizing her visions with dramatic voiceovers
  • YouTube explainers analyzing dream panels
  • Reels and shorts under #私が見た未来 and #2025年予言 (#2025prophecy)

For many, she’s become a mythic warning voice — like a manga version of Nostradamus, but more specific.

🤔 Criticism & Skepticism

Not all feedback is positive.

On 5ちゃんねる (5ch), skeptics raise questions:

  • Could the 3.11 panel have been edited into later editions?
  • Why did she disappear from public view?
  • Is the July 2025 date fearmongering?

But most serious readers acknowledge this:

“Even if one prediction was luck… how many before it stops being luck?”
「一度なら偶然。二度なら運命。」

🙏 A Symbol, Not a Celebrity

Ryo Tatsuki has not given interviews since the 2021 reprint. She rarely speaks publicly. There are no verified photos of her. No press tour. No personal website.

For some, this enhances her credibility:

She does not seek fame. She only recorded what she saw.

Full Prophecy Timeline

A chronological record of what she saw — and what came true.
「夢の中で見た未来の記録」

This section presents a clear, date-based timeline of Ryo Tatsuki’s key dreams and prophecies. Each entry includes the date she saw it, the event she foresaw, when (or if) it happened, and the accuracy — from the believer’s perspective.

📅 Prophecy Table

🌙 Date Dreamed 🔮 Event Described 📆 Event Date ✅ Accuracy 📌 Notes
March 11 (Year?) Massive earthquake in NE Japan March 11, 2011 ✅ Exact Manga shows “3.11” clearly. Dream recorded years earlier.
1996 or earlier Outbreak of a strange airborne illness Jan–Mar 2020 ✅ Exact Vision mentioned “strange pneumonia,” mass panic.
~1997 Princess will die in Europe 1997 (Diana’s death) ✅ General Some connect it to Princess Diana; timing fits.
2000s Eruption worse than Pinatubo by 2015 ❌ Missed No major eruption matched her description.
2000s Economic collapse in 2017 ❌ Missed No matching global crisis that year.
“Dragon wraps around Japan” ❓ Symbolic Interpreted as spiritual pressure or protection.
1999–2021 Sky crack pouring light over Tokyo ❓ Symbolic No physical event; seen as metaphoric “awakening.”
~2020 Massive undersea disaster July 5, 2025 (future) ⏳ Pending Detailed in 2021 reprint. Final, most ominous vision.

🧠 Interpretation Notes

  • ✅ Exact: A clearly fulfilled prophecy, with matching date and context.
  • ✅ General: Fulfilled broadly, though some language is symbolic or indirect.
  • ❌ Missed: A dated prediction that did not occur.
  • ❓ Symbolic: Not literally fulfilled — may represent deeper or nonphysical meaning.
  • ⏳ Pending: Dated prophecy whose time has not yet come.

📌 Closing Note
Some may argue a few of these predictions are too general, or that certain events could be interpreted loosely. But others — especially the 3.11 tsunami, the pandemic, and the specific July 2025 date — carry details that are difficult to dismiss.

“She didn’t ask to be believed. She just recorded what she saw.”
「信じてとは言わなかった。ただ夢で見たことを書いただけ。」

Mor Plai Prai Krasip (หมอปลาย พรายกระซิบ)

The Whisperer Who Listens to Yom

Mor Plai Prai Krasip (หมอปลาย พรายกระซิบ) never asked to be called a prophet. But some whispers cannot be ignored.

She says they come from the dead.
From the deity of death himself — Than Yom (ท่านยม).
A voice she first heard as a frightened child, then as a woman caught between this world and another.

People once laughed. Then her visions came true.

A global plague, seen years before it struck.
An earthquake under Myanmar, tremors in Bangkok — down to the month.
Floods, fires, pandemics, scandals, political shifts.
Things no one saw coming, but she quietly spoke of first.
And always the phrase:

“I pray it doesn’t happen.”
“ขอให้ไม่เกิด”

She calls herself simply “จิตสื่อยมบาล” — a soul who communicates with Yama.
Not a monk. Not a medium in white robes. But a conduit for warnings the world doesn’t always want to hear.

And now she says:
The next great danger is coming.
July 2025.
From the land of raw fish. Across the ocean.
Tremors. Waves. Names that begin with I, P, and V.
Thailand? Just the tail. But the tail still feels the whip.

Her story is not one of fame-seeking.
It is the story of a woman who once ate raw sushi against a spirit’s warning — and was shown the halls of hell as punishment.
Who changed her name when the whisper told her.
Who ordained as a Bhikkhuni in Sri Lanka for one year — not for merit, but as repayment.
Because the visions drain her life force. Because Yama does not give without cost.

She walks between planes. Between karma and catastrophe.
Between disbelief and faith.

This page exists because too many of her visions have come true.
And because one, very soon, still might.

Her name is Mor Plai. The whisperer. The one who listens to Yom.

Mor Plai, the Whisperer Who Listens to Yama

Mor Plai, the Whisperer Who Listens to Yama

👤 Who Is Mor Plai?

Her name in this world is Dr. Nawracha Pinitrokakorn (ดร.ณวรชา พินิจโรคากร).

Born and raised in Bangkok, she once lived a life that could have been perfectly ordinary — daughter, student, citizen. But nothing in her path stayed ordinary for long.

She holds a doctorate in Buddhist Studies. That alone sets her apart. A psychic, yes — but also a scholar of the Dhamma.
When others invoke spirits in glittering shrines, she responds in Pali, with citations.
She studied Yama, then spoke with him.
A strange symmetry.

Her professional name, “Mor Plai Prai Krasip” (หมอปลาย พรายกระซิบ), is more than branding.
It is biography:

  • “หมอปลาย” (Mor Plai) — the seer named Plai.
  • “พรายกระซิบ” (Prai Krasip) — the whispering ghost.

Not a stage name. A confession.

Before visions, there were hauntings.
She says she saw spirits as a girl — not wisps, not shadows, but people. Faces that no one else could see.
It frightened her. At times, she thought she was losing her mind.

She grew up trying to be normal. She laughs about it now: how she once ignored the voice of Yama and went to eat sushi, only to be “dragged out of her body” and shown hell.
She came back different. She calls that moment the beginning.

There is nothing mystical in her manner. She doesn’t chant or tremble or shake.
She sits, speaks, and warns. Calmly. Often in simple Thai dress. No theatrics.
Just messages she claims are not hers.

Her relationship with prophecy is not performative. She never claims to be the source — only the messenger.

“I’m not crazy.”
“ฉันไม่ได้บ้า”

As if to remind herself as much as the audience.

In 2022, she shaved her head and left Thailand.
Ordained as a nun — a Bhikkhuni — in Sri Lanka.
Not for enlightenment. For repayment.
A vow fulfilled to Lord Yama, for the gift that became a burden.

They gave her a new name in the monastery:
Yanawarasavikābodhi (ญาณวรสาวิกาโพธิ) — “She of sublime insight.”
But the world still calls her Mor Plai.

She is not like other fortune-tellers.
She doesn’t read palms or sell lottery numbers.
She doesn’t call herself chosen.

She simply listens.
And relays what the dead whisper through her.

In her words, she is just a conduit.
In her presence, she is something else entirely.

📖 About the Work: The Whispered Visions of Mor Plai

There is no book. No sacred scroll. No handwritten manuscript preserved in a temple drawer.

Mor Plai’s visions are not archived — they are broadcast. Spoken into microphones. Filtered through talk shows, radio interviews, viral clips, and grainy Facebook Lives. Her prophecies exist like mist: scattered, caught mid-air, passed from speaker to screen to post.

But for those who’ve followed her, a pattern forms.

She never reads cards. Never chants. She sits quietly, with hands folded, and says what she’s been told.

She’ll begin with a phrase like:

“I saw something.”
“ปลายเห็นบางอย่างค่ะ”

Or sometimes:

“Than Yom whispered.”
“ท่านยมกระซิบมาค่ะ”

Sometimes it comes in a dream. Other times, in meditation. There are no candles. No rituals. Just a voice she says is not her own.

The details arrive like riddles. She rarely names places outright. Instead:

“The land of raw fish.”
“A city with a broken tail.”
“Letters: I… P… V.”

Everything comes wrapped in symbolism, clues just cryptic enough to protect her — legally, karmically — and just clear enough to be interpreted after the fact.

Unlike the illustrated dreams of Ryo Tatsuki or the oracular writings of Western seers, Mor Plai’s visions are spoken, not drawn.
They are temporal, not textual.
Not meant to be stored — only noticed, just long enough to matter.

There is no official channel, no singular series. Her appearances are scattered across Thai TV:

  • แฉ (Expose) — a late-night talk show known for scandal and revelation
  • โหนกระแส (Hot Issues) — a news-opinion hybrid where she often appears with hosts who try — and usually fail — to make her speak more plainly
  • Short reels uploaded to YouTube, TikTok, and fan channels, often with eerie music and subtitle overlays

She does not market these. She rarely promotes anything. Yet her clips go viral within hours — especially when disaster follows close behind.

In 2014, she said:

“A disease will come that replaces war.”
“จะมีโรคระบาดที่มาแทนสงคราม”

No one noticed.
In 2020, that clip resurfaced everywhere.

In March 2023, she warned of an earthquake affecting Thailand from outside its borders.
In May, one struck Myanmar — felt in Bangkok.

The tone of her speech is calm, almost soft-spoken. No drama. No hysteria. Sometimes, her eyes close briefly before she speaks, like she’s listening mid-sentence. Her body stays still. Her voice remains even. It’s the content, not the delivery, that unsettles.

What makes her medium so strange is also what makes it feel honest.
There is no book to sell. No product. No membership.
Her work lives in moments.

Each prophecy is like a ghost: appearing briefly, leaving a mark, then vanishing into rumor.

That, perhaps, is what makes people listen.

The Quake Beyond Borders: Myanmar, 2023

The Quake Beyond Borders: Myanmar, 2023

✅ Fulfilled Prophecies

Mor Plai has made dozens of predictions — some vague, some symbolic, and some specific enough to be verified after the fact.

What follows are four of the clearest matches between her visions and real-world events. These are the reasons many in Thailand began taking her seriously, even if reluctantly.

🦠 A. The 2014 Disease Prophecy (COVID-19)

  • Prophecy Date: 2014 interview, widely circulated clip

Vision:

“There will be a new disease… a pandemic that changes the world.”
“It will come instead of World War III.”

Real Event:
In early 2020, COVID-19 began spreading worldwide. It disrupted global systems, closed borders, and reshaped modern life. The Thai public, like many others, experienced waves of lockdowns, health crises, and economic shocks.

Degree of Accuracy:

  • Described 6 years in advance
  • Correctly framed as global, not regional
  • Matched timeline, scope, and social impact
  • Chillingly phrased as “not a war, but something that acts like one”

Why It Matters:
This was the moment when clips of Mor Plai began resurfacing en masse. Many had dismissed her before. After COVID-19, the tone changed. A vague-seeming prophecy had aligned too neatly with a historic event. The match felt undeniable.

🌊 B. May 2023: Earthquake from Myanmar

  • Prophecy Date: March 2023

Vision:

“There will be an earthquake.
Not in Thailand — but we will feel it.”
“It will come from a neighboring country.”
“Pray for Myanmar.”

Real Event:
On May 5, 2023, a 6.0-magnitude earthquake struck central Myanmar. Tremors were felt in Bangkok and Chiang Mai, causing panic and minor structural concerns.

Degree of Accuracy:

  • Correct country named in advance
  • Specific phrasing: not inside Thailand, but impactful here
  • Within two-month window of prediction
  • Public safety notices were issued hours after the quake

Why It Matters:
Unlike symbolic prophecies, this one was unusually clear. Myanmar was named. The quake was not catastrophic, but it was exactly the kind of event she described. It built confidence in her as more than vague — as someone possibly tuned to real patterns.

🌧️ C. Southern Flooding and Landslides (2021)

  • Prophecy Date: Late 2020 – early 2021 (broadcasts and interviews)

Vision:

“Floods will come.
Not in the north. The south will suffer this time.”
“Mountains will fall. The water will not stop.”
“Pray for Surat Thani.”

Real Event:
In late 2021, massive rainfall led to widespread flooding in southern Thailand. Landslides occurred in multiple provinces, including Surat Thani, Nakhon Si Thammarat, and Phatthalung. Thousands were displaced. Infrastructure was damaged.

Degree of Accuracy:

  • Region-specific (the South named clearly)
  • Timeframe within same monsoon cycle
  • Included correct provinces and type of disaster (landslides, not just flood)

Why It Matters:
In Thailand, floods are seasonal — but this prediction stood out for its focus. Mor Plai had previously warned of Bangkok floods, but this time her shift to the southern provinces made the timing and geography more distinct. It added to her reputation for not just sensing that something would happen, but where.

🔥 D. The Wat Srisoonthorn Temple Fire (April 2023)

  • Prophecy Date: Early 2023 (Facebook Live)

Vision:

“A spiritual place will burn.”
“A symbol — not just a structure — will be lost.”
“It will happen in the South.”

Real Event:
On April 6, 2023, Wat Srisoonthorn, a revered temple in Phuket, caught fire. A large portion of its roof collapsed. Though no one was injured, the event shocked many — it was a landmark and spiritual center for the region.

Degree of Accuracy:

  • Prophecy referenced “South,” which matches
  • Used symbolic phrasing: “not just a building, but a symbol”
  • Occurred within weeks of broadcast

Why It Matters:
This event was not fatal, but deeply symbolic — matching her language precisely. Many began associating her visions not only with national disasters but also with cultural and spiritual loss.

These four examples represent only a portion of her claims — but they remain the clearest.
Each was documented before the event.
Each gained attention after fulfillment.
And each helped transform Mor Plai from a television curiosity to a voice people now listen to — just in case she’s right again.

❌ Unfulfilled or Vague Prophecies

Mor Plai’s record is not without silence.

For every vision that later seemed to come true, there are others that have faded — quietly, unmentioned — into the stream of time. Some passed without event. Others remain suspended, awaiting interpretation. A few drew criticism, particularly when dates were involved.

This section is not a dismissal, but a disclosure.
Not every whisper led to thunder.

🗓️ A. Missed Timelines

In several interviews, Mor Plai has offered specific timeframes — often framed with cautionary language like “If karma is not cleansed, it may occur.”
Yet a few of these periods have passed without incident.

1. Political Upheaval in 2022

She warned of possible political chaos in Thailand — naming August and September 2022 as critical windows for “sudden change.”
While Thai politics remained turbulent, no singular event matching her tone occurred. Some claimed the resignation rumors of the prime minister fit; others disagreed.

2. Major Bangkok Flood (Mid-2023)

In early 2023, she stated that Bangkok might face “record-setting floods” by June or July. Rainfall was heavy that year, but not catastrophic. Water levels rose — but the city held.
A few clips of ankle-deep water circulated online, but nothing matched the scale implied.

3. Earthquake in Japan – February 2024

She hinted at seismic activity in Japan during that month, possibly followed by a tsunami. While Japan remains seismically active year-round, February passed without a major quake.
Supporters said it may have been postponed by merit-making. Critics called it a miss.

🌫️ B. Symbolic Imagery

Many of Mor Plai’s visions come not in plain language, but through metaphor.

She often receives them during meditation or sleep, then decodes them later with spiritual guidance. This makes several prophecies difficult to assess — they feel significant, but remain unmeasurable.

1. “The Tail Will Be Cut”

A recurring phrase in multiple predictions. She has said it may refer to southern Thailand, or symbolically to something being “cut off” from the body politic or map. No one is quite sure. It has not clearly manifested.

2. “Letters: I, P, V”

Spoken in reference to an upcoming ocean disaster. These letters remain a mystery. Internet speculation ranges from city names (Istanbul, Palu, Vanuatu) to airlines or agencies.
As of now, no event has occurred that ties them to a specific meaning.

3. “People will fall asleep and not wake up”

This phrase, from a 2022 livestream, was interpreted as symbolic — possibly referencing a health event or metaphor for spiritual dormancy. Critics point out the vagueness. Believers say it could still unfold.

📣 C. Public Doubt & Criticism

Despite her growing audience, Mor Plai has faced skepticism from both media figures and online communities.

On Thai forums like Pantip and ดราม่าแอดดิค (Drama-addict), users have questioned her track record, asking whether her “accurate” predictions were retroactively matched to news events.

Others point to her vagueness as a shield: “Too symbolic to be wrong,” one post said.

TV personalities have also challenged her on air. In one interview, a host asked:

“If these are warnings, not guarantees, what makes them different from guesses?”

She replied:

“I don’t want to be right. If it doesn’t happen, I’m relieved.”

To some, that answer is compassionate.
To others, it sidesteps responsibility.

Still, no formal scandals have emerged. Unlike other self-proclaimed seers, Mor Plai has avoided charges of fraud or profiteering. Most of her backlash comes from tone — not conduct.

There is no clear verdict here. Some dates pass. Some images remain unclear.
What one person sees as ambiguity, another sees as prophecy not yet fulfilled.

“The future changes. Karma bends. If we make merit, the disaster fades.”
“My job is to warn — not to make it happen.”

The rest, she says, is up to us.

The Sea That Will Rise: July 2025 Warning

The Sea That Will Rise: July 2025 Warning

🌊 2025 Disaster Warning

Of all her visions, one stands apart.

It has no second meaning.
No metaphor to soften it.
Just a month. A year. A sea. A warning.

“July or August 2025.
Something will rise from the ocean.
A disaster the world is not ready for.”
“กรกฎาคมหรือสิงหาคม 2568... จะมีบางอย่างใต้ทะเลยกตัวขึ้น... คนทั้งโลกไม่พร้อมจะรับมือ”

She first mentioned it in mid-2023, in a livestream clipped and reuploaded by multiple pages. The tone was different — slower, heavier. It wasn’t about karma or merit. It was about inevitability.

The sea, she said, would not shake — it would lift.
She saw a giant force below the ocean, a rupture or explosion. Not nuclear. Something deeper. Something geological.
She saw the shape of it — not in maps, but in dreams.

“A wave that moves silently at first.”
“A current that takes a city before anyone sees it coming.”

The location was never named. But she left clues.

“It is not Thailand. We will only feel the tail.
The beginning happens far from here — in a land that eats raw fish.”

Speculation bloomed instantly.
Many took “raw fish” as a reference to Japan — a common symbolic phrase in Thai prophecies.
Others noted her mention of letters: I, P, V — said to be initials of affected areas or agents.
She never clarified.

Some believe it refers to the Philippine Sea Plate, a tectonic region east of Japan with high seismic activity.
Others point to Indonesia’s volcanoes, or the Pacific Ring of Fire, where several undersea fault lines have been unstable for years.

But her language wasn’t technical. It was visual.

“I saw light beneath water. Then black. Then water over buildings.”

No date was given — only a window:
July to August, 2025.

She did not speak in panic. She didn’t cry.
She only said:

“I do not want to be right.”
“Please, go make merit.”
“We may not be able to stop it — but we can survive it.”

The video went viral. Comment sections filled with guesses, prayers, skepticism.
Some analysts said she was echoing Ryo Tatsuki, the Japanese manga artist who also predicted a July 2025 disaster — an uncanny overlap, but not proven connected.
Others saw only fear-mongering.

But some — quietly, without posts or hashtags — changed travel plans.
Others printed her words on small slips of paper and left them folded inside household shrines.

She has not spoken of it since.
And still, the sea is quiet.

🌍 Public & Cultural Impact

In the swirl of Thai media, where spirits, scandals, and celebrities often share the same screen, Mor Plai has carved out a strange and steady place: the voice that whispers when others scream.

Her rise has not followed the usual arc of religious figures or entertainment psychics. There is no temple with her name. No school of followers. And yet, her reach — especially online — is undeniable.

🧵 Digital Prophecy: Viral Clips and Hashtag Circles

Mor Plai’s predictions often begin quietly — a comment dropped during a guest appearance, or a single sentence said at the end of a Facebook Live. But within hours, the clips spread. Subtitled, reedited, overlaid with ominous music and floating Thai script.

On platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and Pantip, users cut her warnings into countdown reels:
“7 days after Mor Plai said this, it happened.”
Hashtags like #หมอปลายทำนาย (#MorPlaiPrediction) and #คำเตือนยมบาล (#YamaWarning) trend cyclically — especially after natural disasters or strange news.

Some treat her like a spiritual weather report. Others like a puzzle.

📱 Folk Belief, Reloaded

Her presence reflects a new hybrid form of Thai religiosity — one that doesn’t reject technology, but inhabits it.
Where once prophecies lived on palm leaves or were whispered in temples, they now circulate through livestreams, Discord threads, and Instagram reposts.

Young Thais who feel disconnected from institutional Buddhism still watch her.
Not always because they believe, but because something about her feels different. Calm. Detached. Undeniably precise — at least, sometimes.

She is often grouped alongside other modern “seers” like:

  • Ajarn Katha Chinabanchorn, known for energetic rituals and lottery blessings
  • Tassanai, the trance medium of Chiang Mai
  • Ryo Tatsuki, the Japanese manga artist whose “3.11” tsunami sketch eerily preceded Fukushima

But unlike these figures, Mor Plai doesn’t encourage faith in herself.
She directs people to prayer, not to her own name.

🔁 Rediscovery and Reaction

Every time one of her older predictions seems to align with a new event, there’s a resurgence.
Archived clips are clipped again.
Subreddits translate her words for foreign audiences.
YouTube thumbnails call her “The Woman Who Spoke to Yama.”

Yet reactions remain divided:

  • Spiritual believers treat her as a karmic weather vane — not infallible, but worth watching.
  • Preppers and survivalists in Southeast Asia increasingly cite her July 2025 warning in risk assessments.
  • Occult communities study her use of initial letters, dream dates, and symbolic mapping.
  • Skeptics, especially from academic circles and atheist forums, accuse her of fishing for vague hits — “cold reading at national scale.”

Still, her influence shows no signs of fading.

🧭 A Voice in the Noise

In the digital prophecy ecosystem of the 2020s — where anyone can claim foresight and misinformation travels faster than faith — Mor Plai stands apart for one reason:

She doesn’t push.

There is no merchandise. No temple tourism. No seminars.
She doesn’t even post daily.
She only speaks when there’s something she believes must be said.

That restraint, in a noisy age, may be the loudest thing of all.

📅 Full Prophecy Timeline

A chronological record of what she saw — and what came true.
「บันทึกอนาคตที่ยมกระซิบ」 — A record of the future whispered by Yama.

This section presents a clear, date-based timeline of Mor Plai’s key visions and public prophecies. Each entry includes when the vision occurred, what she described, the real-world event it may have matched, and a result label — from the perspective of those who believe.

🌙 Prophecy Date vs. 📆 Real Event

🌙 Prophecy Date 🔮 Event Described 📆 Real Event ✅ Result 📌 Notes
2014 A disease will come instead of World War III COVID-19 pandemic (2020) ✅ General Quoted widely after pandemic spread; phrasing was striking
Late 2020 – Early 2021 Southern Thailand will flood; landslides; pray for Surat Thani Southern Thailand floods & landslides (2021) ✅ Exact Named region and disaster type correctly; significant damage
March 2023 Earthquake outside Thailand, but felt within; pray for Myanmar Myanmar earthquake felt in Bangkok (May 2023) ✅ Exact Described regional impact with specific country named
Early 2023 A spiritual place in the South will burn; loss of symbol Wat Srisoonthorn fire in Phuket (April 2023) ✅ Exact Phrase “a symbol will burn” matched temple fire tone
Mid 2023 Massive undersea event July–Aug 2025; initialed locations I, P, V ⏳ Pending ⏳ Pending Many suspect Japan or Pacific region; still unconfirmed
2022 Political disruption in Thailand, Aug–Sep 2022 No major political collapse occurred ❌ Missed No upheaval occurred within stated period
Early 2023 Bangkok to experience record floods in mid-2023 Heavy rain, but no major flooding ❌ Missed Minor flooding occurred but not at predicted scale
Feb 2024 Tsunami from earthquake near Japan No significant event occurred in February 2024 ❌ Missed Nothing major detected; may have been symbolic or error

🧠 Interpretation Notes

  • ✅ Exact: Clear match with date, location, and outcome.
  • ✅ General: Vague or symbolic but fits major elements.
  • ⏳ Pending: Timeframe not yet reached or unfolding.
  • ❌ Missed: Specific date passed without matching event.
“My job is to warn — not to make it happen.”
“หน้าที่ของฉันคือเตือน ไม่ใช่ทำให้มันเกิดขึ้น”

Prophecy Comparison

When Two Prophets Point to the Same Month

Two visionaries. Two methods. Two countries. And one extraordinary overlap. Ryo Tatsuki — a Japanese manga artist — dreamed disasters that later came true, and published them quietly in her comic books. Mor Plai — a Thai spiritual conduit — speaks the warnings of Yama, the deity of death, live on television.

Neither knew of the other. Yet both issued their most chilling warning for the same moment: July 2025. One drew a tsunami. One described a wave rising from the sea. Both used symbolic, dreamlike language. Both pointed to something vast, oceanic — and imminent.

🌊 Shared July 2025 Prophecy

🧙 Seer 📅 Prophecy Date 🔮 Method 🌊 Event Description 📍 Implied Region ⏳ Status 📝 Notes
Ryo Tatsuki ~1999 Dream → Manga Panel Tsunami overtakes city
Dated clearly “2025/7” in Japanese
Japan (implied) ⏳ Pending Found in published manga
Gained renewed attention after 3.11
Mor Plai Mid 2023 Vision → Livestream Warning “Something will rise from the ocean”
City swallowed; initials I / P / V
“Land that eats raw fish” (interpreted as Japan) ⏳ Pending Said “Thailand will feel the tail”
Tone was somber, not symbolic

This isn't a case of one copying the other. Ryo’s dream was drawn long ago. Mor Plai’s message came decades later. Their overlap may be coincidence — or convergence. What matters now is not whether we believe, but whether we are listening.

“Something will rise from beneath the sea.”
“จะมีบางอย่างใต้ทะเลยกตัวขึ้น”

Why We Listen

This page is not built on fear, hype, or superstition.
It’s built on a pattern — of warnings that were ignored, then fulfilled.

From manga pages drawn decades ago to livestreams spoken in passing, these visions point to a single window: July 2025. That alone doesn’t prove anything. But it’s enough to pay attention.

Belief here doesn’t mean panic.
It means awareness, reflection, and staying present — moment by moment, as it unfolds.

That’s why we share live updates and quiet insights — a space to stay oriented without the noise, across WhatsApp and Twitter.

Stay Tuned