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Anime that predicted the future – From AI to global pandemics

Anime that predicted the future – From AI to global pandemics

Time of India22-05-2025
Credits: Ranker
In recent years fans have noticed uncanny parallels between sci‑fi anime and real life. Some anime
seem
to have predicted today's news – from neural implants and smart cities to viral outbreaks. For example, the classic
Akira
(1988) showed Neo-Tokyo hosting the 2020 Olympics, a detail echoed when Tokyo actually held the Games (albeit delayed by COVID‑19). Likewise, popular shows like
Ghost in the Shell
and
Psycho-Pass
envisioned future tech that now has real‑world counterparts. We look at key
anime predictions
– both famous and obscure – that mirror modern advances in AI, virtual reality, and even global pandemics.
Cybernetic minds and AI futures
Anime often envisions humans merging with technology. In
Ghost in the Shell
(1995), Major Kusanagi is a cyborg whose cybernetic brain can be hacked. That idea of a 'brain chip' is no longer pure fantasy. In January 2024, Elon Musk's
Neuralink
confirmed the first successful human implant of a brain‑computer interface. The device lets a paralyzed patient move a cursor just by thinking, eerily similar to sci‑fi. Ghost in the Shell even warned of the dangers: Kusanagi's upgrades make her vulnerable to hackers, a cautionary parallel to today's cybersecurity concerns in neural tech.
Another prophetic anime is
Psycho-Pass
(2013), which imagines a dystopia where all citizens get a 'Crime Coefficient' score based on brain scans. People flagged as high-risk can be hunted by police
before
they commit any crime. This premise has real echoes: researchers at the University of Chicago built an AI model that predicts crimes a week in advance with about 90% accuracy using public data. In other words, predictive policing – once a dark fantasy – is already being tested.
These examples show how anime foresaw the rise of powerful algorithms and surveillance tech long before they appeared in the news.
Virtual worlds and dreams
Virtual reality and the internet are other themes anime got right. The cult classic
Serial Experiments Lain
(1998) centers on 'the Wired' – a vast virtual world linked to everyone's minds. It portrayed teenagers so engrossed online that the boundary between reality and the internet breaks down.
Decades later, we live in a world of social media, VR games and online avatars that make Lain's vision feel prophetic.
Similarly, Satoshi Kon's
Paprika
(2006) imagined a device that lets therapists enter and share people's dreams. In the film a 'dream terrorist' causes fantasy and reality to merge. Strikingly, today entrepreneurs are developing lucid‑dreaming technology. One startup's prototype headset can record brain activity during sleep and even help users shape their dreams – a real-world echo of
Paprika
's plot.
Even lesser‑known anime made accurate guesses.
Den-noh Coil
(2007) follows schoolkids wearing AR 'cyber‑glasses' that overlay games and data onto the real world. Set in 2026, it portrays a society where augmented reality (AR) is ubiquitous – a scenario now unfolding as smartphones and smart glasses bring AR apps to life. In short, many sci‑fi anime foresaw virtual and mixed realities years before they arrived in labs or on store shelves.
Pandemics and post‑apocalypse
Credits: Dazed
Many anime also tackle disasters and disease. For instance, the horror manga
Virus Fang
(1997) – though not an anime – vividly depicted a global viral outbreak long before COVID‑19. Fans note how its 25‑year‑old story about pandemic panic reads like a prophecy today. In anime series, sudden plagues often become monster outbreaks.
Highschool of the Dead
(2006) starts with a mysterious virus that turns people into zombies, stranding classmates in their school.
Kabaneri of the Iron Fortress
(2016) imagines a 'Kabane' virus transforming humanity into undead creatures, forcing survivors into fortified trains. These apocalyptic visions – from zombie hordes to frozen-in-time worlds (
King of Thorn
has a 'Medusa' plague) – resonate with our real fears about contagion and collapse. They remind us that anime often explores what society would do in a global crisis.
It's worth noting, however, that not every spooky coincidence holds up. For example, internet rumors claimed
Akira
showed the World Health Organization warning about a disease. In reality, fact-checkers confirm
Akira
never mentions any pandemic or WHO.
The film's 'apocalypse' is a psychic bomb in 1988, and the bit about Tokyo 2020 was only a backdrop – there's no virus plot. So while many anime have frighteningly accurate details, others are still just fiction.
When fiction meets reality
From neural implants to virtual nightmares to viral plagues, anime has covered a lot of ground. These stories can feel prophetic:
Akira
's Tokyo Olympics setting,
Ghost in the Shell
's brain chips, or
Psycho-Pass
' crime algorithms all arrived on screen years before similar realities. As we develop new technologies and face new threats, anime fans enjoy spotting predictions in their favorite shows. Whether by coincidence or inspiration, the
sci-fi anime
foresight on display gives us a fun way to compare fiction with fact. And who knows – the next great anime may already be plotting tomorrow's headlines.
Check out our list of the
latest Hindi
,
English
,
Tamil
,
Telugu
,
Malayalam
, and
Kannada movies
. Don't miss our picks for the
best Hindi movies
,
best Tamil movies,
and
best Telugu films
.
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