Throughout history, people have tried to peer into the future, sometimes through science, sometimes through their own wild imagination, and sometimes through a mysterious intuition that not a lot of people have.
Most predictions fade away or miss the mark, but every now and then, someone gets it eerily right. These moments are fascinating not just because of their accuracy, but because of what they reveal about human curiosity, creativity and even evolution.
Some forecasts seemed impossible at the time, and many others were dismissed as fantasy or coincidence. Yet decades or even centuries later, reality caught up with the vision and it surprised the world. This bold predictions remind us that the line between speculation and truth can be surprisingly thin.
1
Archibald Montgomery Low
This british scientist basically imagined half of our modern world a century ago, alarm clocks, TV news, escalators and more.
2
Craig Hamilton-Parker
He claimed a big shipping disaster was coming. Days later, a tanker collision made headlines.
3
The World’s Fair art from 1900
French artists drew future tech for postcards, video calls, flying mailmen, even automated schools. They weren’t far off at all.
4
General Foch’s warning
After World War I, he said the Versailles Treaty was just a “20-year armistice.” Sure enough, WWII kicked off exactly two decades later.
5
Jules Verne book
In From the Earth to the Moon, Verne described a Florida launch, a space capsule, and astronauts coming back in the ocean. That’s Apollo 11, over 100 years before NASA.
6
Alexis de Tocqueville sees the Cold War
Long before nukes or communism, he warned that Russia and America would rise and clash. History proved him right.
7
Baba Vanga’s prophecies
The blind mystic from Bulgaria, predicted 9/11 and Princess Diana's death. Her predictions sometimes are vague but creepy nevertheless.
8
The Titanic book prediction
A novel called Futility described an “unsinkable” ship named Titan that hit an iceberg with too few lifeboats. Fourteen years later, the Titanic disaster played out almost the same way.
9
Mark Twain and Halley's Comet
Twain joked he’d die when Halley’s Comet returned. Sure enough, he passed away in 1910, the same year the comet swung by. Maybe he knew all along.
10
Paul the octopus
During the World Cup, this little octopus correctly picked the winners of multiple matches.
11
John Elfreth Watkins
At the turn of the century, this American engineer predicted color photos and recorded moving images. Both felt impossible back then, but he was spot on.
12
Ray Kurzweil on tech
In the ’90s, Kurzweil talked about pocket computers, virtual assistants, and AI. Everything has come true.
13
Solar and wind power
Archibald Low predicted energy would come from the sun and wind. Right on target.
14
The Simpsons being scarily accurate
From predicting smartwatches and FaceTime to even a Tr*mp presidency, feels like this cartoon has an oddly accurate crystal ball.
15
Nikola Tesla
Tesla said people would one day carry pocket devices that connect instantly across the globe. Sounds a lot like something we know very well now.
16
Nostradamus
The most famous name when it comes to predictions. In his book he wrote cryptic verses that have been interpreted as predictions of major world events, like The French Revolution or WWII.
17
Women in pants
Archibald Low once more, also guessed that women would swap skirts for trousers. A bold call back then, now common.