Ebo Noah is a Ghanaian social media figure and self-styled prophet who went viral in 2025 for claiming God told him to build modern “arks” ahead of a catastrophic global flood supposedly starting on December 25, 2025.

Who is Ebo Noah?

  • Ebo Noah (real name Evans Eshun) is known online as a content creator and “seer” from Ghana.
  • He gained attention by appearing in sackcloth-style robes and posting dramatic videos about an incoming three‑year worldwide flood.

What did he claim?

  • He repeatedly claimed that God had instructed him to build about 10 large arks to save people from a global flood starting on Christmas Day 2025.
  • In his videos he invited people to “book” places on the ark, framing it as protection from the end of the world and sharing specific dress codes and conditions.

Did the prophecy come true?

  • The predicted Christmas Day 2025 flood and “end of the world” did not happen; weather in Ghana on the day was normal and no global catastrophe occurred.
  • After nothing happened, he posted new messages saying God had extended or postponed the event because of prayers and the number of people coming to the ark.

Is Ebo Noah “for real” or just content?

  • Many journalists, commentators and other influencers in Ghana have described him as mainly a social media or TikTok content creator using shock and fear for virality.
  • Some reports say parts of the ark project were more like a staged or exaggerated setup (at least one video describes the “ark” as basically a fishing boat) and accuse him of misleading followers.

Legal and public reaction

  • Ghanaian authorities have a recent history of cracking down on “doom prophecies,” and reports state he has been investigated or detained for causing fear and panic with false information.
  • Commentaries and explainers about Ebo Noah stress critical thinking: they urge people to rely on official weather and emergency agencies rather than viral prophetic videos about disasters.

Bottom line: the “Ebo Noah” Christmas flood prophecy is not true, the world did not end, and there is no verified evidence of a coming global flood linked to his claims.