Travelers avoiding Japan because of dire comic book prediction
Travelers are reportedly avoiding visits to Japan this summer after a catastrophic prediction made in a comic book.
Bookings from Asian countries have plummeted by as much as 50 percent compared with last year, with some speculating the cause is due to the manga graphic novel The Future I Saw.
In the comic, published in 1999 by Ryo Tatsuki, a huge earthquake prompts scores of tsunami waves that engulf Japan. The date of the fictional disaster: July 2025.
According to a Bloomberg Intelligence analysis of ForwardKeys data, airline bookings from Taiwan, South Korea have dropped since April, with Hong Kong flights plunging by an average of 50 percent from last year.
Weekly arrival bookings for late June to early July from the Asian financial hub also dropped by over 80 percent, the analysis showed.
Despite this, officials have implored tourists not to buy into the rumors, and scientists have reiterated that the exact times and strengths of earthquakes cannot be predicted using current scientific methods.
Japan's tourism industry has been strong, with a record-breaking 3.9 million foreign visitors recorded in April, the most recent figures available.
But the 'quake speculations are definitely having a negative impact on Japan tourism and it will slow the boom temporarily,' warned Eric Zhu, Bloomberg Intelligence's analyst for aviation and defense.
'Travelers are taking a risk-adverse approach given the plethora of other short-haul options in the region.'
Many say that warnings from Tatsuki should perhaps be heeded, as she has reportedly claimed to have predicted other natural disasters, including the Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami in 2011.
'I, myself, would like to take precautions such as stockpiling supplies in preparation for disasters and confirming evacuation routes when going out,' the artist said in a statement to Bloomberg. 'I intend to remain vigilant on a daily basis as we approach July 2025.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Dakota Johnson Reveals New Family Member After Chris Martin Breakup
Originally appeared on E! Online Dakota Johnson has caught a new animal in her web. Less than a week after her breakup with Chris Martin was revealed, the Materialists star shared that she adopted a new puppy named Tokyo from the Santa Barbara Humane Society in California. "We rescued her on Saturday from the Santa Barbara pound," Dakota told host Amy Poehler during the June 10 episode of the Good Hang podcast. "I didn't plan on it." The 35-year-old went on to share that she was still coping with the death of her previous dog Zeppelin, who died in December at age 17, when she stumbled upon the brown-and-white haired pup. "I thought, 'It's gonna be a while,'" Dakota recalled. "But then I saw her, and she's an angel." And Tokyo is already warming up to her new home. In fact, Dakota—who brought her new BFF to the podcast appearance—noted that the doggo's playfulness inside the recording studio was a new development. More from E! Online Aaron Rodgers Reveals He's Married Justin Bieber Slams "Transactional Relationships' After Hailey Bieber Split Rumors Tarek El Moussa Cited for Battery After Altercation in Las Vegas "She's a performer," Dakota joked after Tokyo began sniffing her microphone. "Honestly, she has come alive on camera. She normally hides in the back of her crate. She's really timid. And now she's like, 'Here I am.'" Addressing her pup directly, she quipped, "You're an actress just like your mom!" Six days prior to Tokyo's big debut, multiple outlets reported that Dakota and Chris, 48, had called it quits after nearly eight years together. And while the Madame Web actress has yet to publicly address the split, she has shared what her dating non-negotiable is going forward. As she told Craig Melvin on the June 9 episode of Today, 'Just like, not an a--hole.' Another important trait her future partner should probably have? Loving dogs. After all, Dakota has previously detailed the crucial role her late dog played in her life. 'We've basically grown up together," Dakota said of Zeppelin during a June 2024 interview with TalkHouse. "He is extremely smart and sweet and perfect and soulful. He's always been a very healing dog for people, so I made him a certified emotional support animal. Which is just the sweetest thing ever.' For more stars and their adorable pets, keep reading. Brie LarsonKevin Costner For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App


Forbes
3 hours ago
- Forbes
Use Of Xenon Gas Shortens Everest Climb Time, But What's The Point?
21 May 2024, Nepal, Mount Everest: Climbers and mountain guides are stranded between the South Summit and the Hillary step of Mount Everest after an ice collapse destroyed the fixed ropes used for climbing. Photo: Narendra Shahi Thakuri/dpa (Photo by Narendra Shahi Thakuri/picture alliance via Getty Images) dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images In the first two parts of this interview series with American Himalayan Foundation president Norbu Tenzing Norgay and renowned mountaineer Conrad Anker, we covered a lot of ground on Everest (links below). Here, in the third final part, we ask Norgay about the use of Xenon gas to aid with high-altitude climbing; who got to the top of Everest first, his father Tenzing or Sir Edmund Hillary; the 1924 George Mallory/Sandy Irvine mystery; and the idea of Guinness records. Following are edited excerpts from a longer conversation. Jim Clash: What do you make of the team of four that used Xenon gas to get from Great Britain to the top of Everest and back home in a week? Norbu Tenzing Norgay: Yeah, you can do the peak in like four days that way. I'm not a climber, but part of the adventure is going over there, meeting with the people, enjoying the commraderie, the spirit of the mountain. This kind of thing sucks the spirit out of the experience, the thing that really should motivate you, you know? Clash: Speaking of Xenon, it seems that more and more folks are climbing for Guinness records. I remember Ed Viesturs joking with me that now it's the first person with a blue and a red shoe to the top carrying a potato. I'm sure those Xenon climbers will want a "fastest" Everest record, too. Norgay: For those kinds of people, the records might mean something, but on a bigger scale, I don't think they mean anything. It's just for individual ego, I guess. A lot of people up there have no business, and they are risking the lives of others. Sherpas only make about $5,000 for the [10-week] Everest climbing season, taking a whole lot of risks. Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary drink tea in the Western Cwm, Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary drink a celebratory cup of tea at Camp IV in the Western Cwm after their successful ascent of Mount Everest, Nepal, 30th May 1953. Mount Everest Expedition 1953. (Photo by George Band/Royal Geographical Society via Getty Images) Royal Geographical Society via Getty Images Clash: It can be downright dangerous, too. Norgay: A few years ago, two women were climbing Shishapangma to compete for a Guinness record. They both ignored weather warnings, and went for the top from different sides of the mountain on an iffy day. Both were killed, unfortunately, in separate avalanches. Sometimes people are willing to take it that far, and the consequences there were not good. We live in a very different world today, Jim. Their two Sherpas - Mingmar and Tenjen Lama - unfortunately died as well. My thoughts and prayers are with all of the deceased. Clash: I'll ask you this, and I'm sure you've addressed the subject many times. In 1953, did your father or Ed Hillary set foot on the Everest summit first? Norgay: What they had always said was they had made it to the top together, and that's what we always believed. It wasn't the two of them, by the way, but the 500 support people behind them. Later, I think Ed said in his book, that he, physically at least, was the one to step on top first. Clash: As for the George Mallory and Sandy Irvine mystery, do you personally think they made it to the top of Everest in 1924? QOMOLANGMA, TIBET - APRIL 29: (CHINA OUT) An Olympic flag waves in front of Mt. Qomolangma (Mount Everest) from the media center at the Rongbuk Base Camp as organisers prepare to cover the ascent of the Beijing Olympic flame to the world's highest peak on April 29, 2008 in Qomolangma, Tibet. The torch bearers are waiting for some good weather before they start the relay. (Photo by Cui Jun/Visual China Group via Getty Images) Visual China Group via Getty Images Norgay: I think what they did was an amazing feat at the time. I remember when Conrad [Anker] found Mallory's body in 1999, one of the members of his expedition I spoke with afterword said he didn't think so. Mallory's route on the North (Tibetan) side of the mountain is even tougher than the Nepalese side [the route Tenzing and Ed took]. In any case, getting to the top is just half of the journey. You need to make it back alive. But it's still a mystery. I think they found Irvine's boot last year, and I'm sure somebody's going to go look for his camera next.


Gizmodo
3 hours ago
- Gizmodo
Congrats ‘GQuuuuuuX,' You Just Got Your First Big ‘Gundam' War Crime
Gundam loves itself a war crime. That is partially the point of it all—it is a series built on acknowledging the horrors of catastrophic, large scale conflict, the cycle of war and the potential for what humanity's future could look like as it yearns to reach out and better understand its place among the stars beyond that cycle. But it also just means that, as an almost inevitability at some point, a Gundam series in need of a dramatic stake finds itself in need of a very big war crime. And this week GQuuuuuuX allowed itself that moment… and of course, did so through an echoing from the first Gundam's past. There are, in fact, several war crimes going on in Gundam GQuuuuuuX's 10th episode—even putting aside the deployment of child soldiers as standard, as both Challia Bull and Kycilia Zabi shape Machu and Nyaan respectively into the weapons of their ideological intents—but of course the biggest is the deployment of the Solar Ray. Introduced simmering in the background like a perpetual Chekov's Giant Orbital Laser Cannon the past few episodes, GQuuuuuuX's imagining of the Solar Ray in its remixing of the Universal Century has been as a climate project, a way to help rejuvenate Earth's damaged ecosystem in the wake of the environmental damage brought about by nuclear winter. Of course, anyone who's watched the first Gundam knows that you don't put the name 'Solar Ray' on something that is in fact for the betterment of humanity: in the 1979 show, the Solar Ray is one of Gihren Zabi's most heinous ideas of the series, a space colony where its inhabitants have been violently resettled from so it can be carved out into what is essentially a giant gun barrel. At the dramatic climax of the show's final few episodes, the audience and our heroes are like witness its horrifying activation—the 'light of hatred,' as an almost-delirious Amuro Ray puts it—as it disintegrates a huge chunk of the Earth Federation's fleet and its top commanders, the Federation's own weapon of mass destruction, the similarly named 'Solar System,' as well as Gihren's father and the supreme leader of Zeon, Degwin Zabi, who was meeting with the Federation to attempt to bring an end to the One Year War peacefully. The Solar Ray of GQuuuuuuX has its own similar intent. It's a giant WMD, this time wielded by Kycilia rather than Gihren after she successfully poisons him, and we get to watch as it beam-slash-black-holes most of Gihren's forces as well as Zeon's giant battle station, A Boa Qu. What's interesting about GQuuuuuuX's Solar Ray, however, is that it has a different, but mirrored, thematic heart. If the Solar Ray of the 1979 show was a hollowed-out Colony, a symbol of humanity's ascent from the cradle of Earth and into a life in space now turned into a weapon of terrible and awesome power, GQuuuuuuX's Solar Ray speaks to another broad idea at the crux of Gundam storytelling in the Universal Century continuity that many of its series belong to—the weaponization and exploitation of the Newtype, humanity's evolutionary step, to usher in a new age of violence over that of a new age of peace. Powered by Nyaan and her own mobile suit, the GFReD, at the behest of Kycilia, as well as the recovered 'Rose of Sharon' and its mysterious alternate Lalah Sune, GQuuuuuuX's Solar Ray is less of a giant laser beam, but a weaponized blast of Newtype power. It operates on creating a 'Zeknova'—the same psionic, temporal anomaly that mysteriously vanished Char Aznable and the Gundam at the climax of the war, the same energy field that Newtypes see visions of worlds and times and possibilities beyond normal human comprehension. UC Gundam stories have rarely been subtle about taking the advent of Newtypism and turning it into the latest extension of armed conflict, but in GQuuuuuuX it's about as literal as it can be: the most prominent and most advanced of Newtypes in Lalah being used, against her will, as a battery for mass destruction. That the next generation of humankind must be wielded like a cudgel to maintain the bitter conflicts and hegemonies of those the generations before them. Of the show's many mirrors to the original Gundam, it's one of GQuuuuuuX's most potent and interesting so far, in terms of the scope of its destructive power, and the distinct unsubtlety of its commentary. GQuuuuuuX has already played a lot with the idea of what it means to be a Gundam series, and more specifically a Universal Century Gundam series. For all the potential answers it has fielded, sometimes the most valid one is to have a really big laser gun doing war crimes while you practically scream its symbolism at the audience.