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Alice in Borderland

From Wikipedia of Horror

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Template:Infobox animanga/Header Template:Infobox animanga/Print Template:Collapsed infobox section begin Template:Infobox animanga/Print Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Print Template:Infobox animanga/Print Template:Collapsed infobox section end Template:Infobox animanga/Other Template:Infobox animanga/Footer Template:Nihongo is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Haro Aso. It was first serialized in Shogakukan's [[Shōnen manga|Template:Transliteration manga]] magazine Shōnen Sunday S from November 2010 to March 2015, and later moved to Weekly Shōnen Sunday, where it ran from April 2015 to March 2016. Its chapters were collected in 18 Template:Transliteration volumes. Alice in Borderland was adapted into a three-episode original video animation (OVA), released from October 2014 to February 2015.

A spin-off series, Alice on Border Road, illustrated by Takayoshi Kuroda, was serialized in Shogakukan's [[Seinen manga|Template:Transliteration manga]] magazine Monthly Sunday Gene-X from August 2015 to February 2018, with its chapters collected in eight Template:Transliteration volumes. A sequel, written and illustrated by Aso, Alice in Borderland Retry, was serialized in Weekly Shōnen Sunday from October 2020 to January 2021, with its chapters collected in two Template:Transliteration volumes.

A live-action television series adaptation, produced by Netflix and directed by Shinsuke Sato, premiered worldwide with an eight-episode first season in December 2020; it was followed by an eight-episode second season in December 2022. A third season premiered in September 2025, and features an original story beyond the manga.

Plot

Ryohei Arisu is an apathetic young man who finds little meaning in his daily life, spending most of his time with friends Daikichi Karube, a responsible bar owner, and the carefree Chōta Segawa. Their mundane existence is shattered when mysterious fireworks transport them to a deserted, vegetation-choked version of Tokyo called the Borderlands, the land between life and death. There they meet Saori Shibuki, another stranded player who explains the brutal rules of this new world—participants must risk their lives in deadly games based on playing cards. Every player has a visa and the number of the playing card that they complete corresponds to how many days they have left on their visa until they must play the next game. For example, if a player competes a Five of Hearts difficulty game, five days will be added to their visas, meaning they have five more days without having to play another game. Once the five days are up and they haven't completed a game, they will be killed.

Their first game, "Three of Clubs", tests their knowledge under threat of flames bursting from the floor, leaving Chota injured. As they navigate this dangerous new reality, the group faces increasingly perilous games. Arisu and Karube decide to enter another game to try and find a doctor to tend to Chota's injuries. The game, "Five of Spades", has players evade two armed taggers while trying to find a special door. Arisu and Karube barely make it out alive with the help of other players who become more prominent such as Yuzuha Usagi, Morizono Aguni, and Shuntarō Chishiya. In the group's next game, the devastating "Seven of Hearts", Karube, Chota and Shibuki make the ultimate sacrifice to ensure Arisu's survival. Emotionally shattered, Arisu eventually teams up with the resourceful climber Yuzuha Usagi from the game "Five of Spades". Together they seek the Beach, a player stronghold led by the eccentric "Mad Hatter" who believes collecting all game cards will grant freedom.

The Beach's fragile order collapses when it becomes the arena for the "Ten of Hearts" game. Following its completion, the mysterious gamemasters reveal this was merely the first stage—now survivors must face even deadlier challenges against the powerful face card opponents to escape Borderland. The revelation sets the stage for an even greater struggle for survival.

Characters

Main

Template:Nihongo Alice
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A video-game obsessed third year high school student (24-year old in the Netflix series) who "does not fit in with his family". Due to his addictions in video games, he was shown to be a skilled analyzer, solving puzzles and pattern on the games and specializes in playing heart games.
Template:Nihongo The Rabbit
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A mountain climber who was transported into the Borderlands shortly after the death of her father, whom she deeply respected. Usagi teams up with Arisu shortly after the deaths of his friends. Due to her experience in mountain climbing, she specializes in spade games. In the third season of the Netflix adaptation, she and Arisu are married and are expecting their first child together.

The Borderlands

Arisu's Friends

Template:Nihongo The Walrus
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In the original manga, Karube is a high school student who owns a bar. The Netflix adaptation reimagines him as a bartender preparing to propose to a coworker, who is secretly involved with his boss. He is a close friend of Arisu and Chōta.
Template:Nihongo The Carpenter
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A highschooler (IT technician in the Netflix series) and friend of Arisu and Karube. He is immature and slightly perverted, although he means well and is loyal to his friends. In the Netflix series, he is sensible, highly religious and under pressure due to his mother taking his money for her cult.
Template:Nihongo
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Shibuki is the first player encountered by Arisu and his friends in the deserted city. In the manga, she is a determined individual who develops a genuine care for the group, ultimately choosing to sacrifice herself. The Netflix adaptation portrays her as a skilled but manipulative player who assists the group primarily for her own benefit.

Allied Players

Template:Nihongo The Cheshire Cat
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A mysterious, nonchalant, quiet, and sly player who teams up with Kuina to steal Hatter's deck of cards, the leader and founder of "the Beach", believing that a full deck would transport them out of the empty city. He later becomes interested in Arisu and Usagi after helping them escape a game of "Tag".
Template:Nihongo The Caterpillar
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A member of the Beach who works with Chishiya to steal the deck of cards; however, the two fall out when Chishiya betrays her, so she abandons him in favor of working with Arisu and Usagi. In the Netflix series, the two never fall out and she constantly asks people if he is okay after they are separated. A former clothing shop clerk, she is revealed to be transgender, and was disowned by her father.
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A young mechanic who is saved by Arisu during a game and later becomes his ally. He later sacrifices himself to save Arisu and the others during the King of Clubs game.
Template:Nihongo The March Hare
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A highschooler with a special affinity for archery who later partners with Dodo and Aguni. She lost her leg in the first game she participated in.
Template:Nihongo The Dodo Bird
A third-year middle schooler Arisu saves in the Four of Hearts game who later partners with Aguni and Akane, who he grows close with. He is the only major character that was never adapted in the Netflix series.

Beach

Template:Nihongo Template:Nihongo
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A former hatter and the leader and founder of "the Beach", a hotel inhabited by dozens of players. His main goal is to collect all the playing cards given to players for winning games. He later went mad due to his various attempts to escape the game and after a planned plot, deliberately gets himself killed by Aguni to relieve him of his despair.
Template:Nihongo The Knave of Hearts
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A strong fighter and Hatter's best friend, Aguni is first introduced as an important member of "the Beach". He is in charge of a violent group at the beach titled "The Militants". After the death of the Hatter and the "Witch Hunt" game, he ventures out alone, later meeting and teaming up with Akane and Dodo.
Template:Nihongo The White Queen
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An executive member of "the Beach" who attempts to win difficult games through rational thinking. Ann is one of the key players in the "Witch Hunt" game. She later teams up with Arisu and Kuina.
Template:Nihongo The Jub Jub Bird
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A young yet dangerous member of "the Beach", described as being "aggressive due to his complicated past". He is a part of "the Militants". He was severely injured by Chishiya and Aguni during the "Witch Hunt" game and harbors a deep hatred for Chishiya and Arisu. However, he begrudgingly teams up with Arisu during the King of Clubs game, in which he ventures out alone at the end.

Gamemasters/Citizens

Template:Nihongo The Queen of Hearts
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One of the face card gamemasters: The Queen of Hearts of the borderlands. A mysterious woman with an "elegant presence", she first appeared as an executive member of "the Beach". The only female main gamemaster. Unlike other gamemasters who are just civilians playing the roles for the borderlands, she seems to be the only one who knows the true origins of the Borderlands. She is later defeated by Arisu.
Template:Nihongo The King of Diamonds
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One of the face card gamemasters: The King of Diamonds of the borderlands, who is a former failed lawyer struggling to find equality in life. Like Mira, he also first appeared as an executive member of "the Beach". He is the most cunning and smartest of the gamemasters. He is later defeated by Chishiya.
Template:Nihongo The King of Clubs
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One of the face card gamemasters: The King of Clubs of the borderlands, who is a nudist and a former musician in a band with his group who leads the Osmosis game. The most laid-back and humane of the gamemasters, he is the only gamemaster who Arisu deeply respects. He is later defeated by Arisu after the latter manage to trick him in the last minute of the game.
Template:Nihongo The King of Spades
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The King of Spades is a formidable gamemaster, described as a mercenary and former special forces soldier. He oversees the brutal Survival game and is the most combative of the face card holders. After numerous confrontations with Arisu and his allies, Aguni ultimately shoots and kills him in a final struggle.
Template:Nihongo The Jack of Hearts
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One of the face card gamemasters: The Jack of Hearts of the borderlands, who appears to be a sly young man in the prison game with Chishiya, although in reality he is revealed to be manipulative and sadistic. He was exposed as the Jack of Hearts through Banda and Yaba's unexpected alliance and Chishiya's deduction, in which in turn he was killed by the duo in order to clear the game.
Template:Nihongo The Queen of Spades
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The Queen of Spades is a highly athletic individual who oversees the "Checkmate" game. Usagi ultimately defeats her by convincing all other players to unite against her, leaving the Queen without any opposition.
Template:Nihongo The Bandersnatch
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A serial killer who participates in the games, Banda chooses to remain in the Borderlands as a citizen, seeking to rule it.

Others

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A high school student and softball player from Tokyo. She is transported to a desolate version of Kyoto. In this Borderland, she becomes the holder of the Queen of Hearts card.
"Joker" / The Watchman
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An enigmatic entity known as the Joker is the implied creator of the Borderland. It appears to Arisu, identifying itself as the "Watchman" of this realm. The Joker explains that its role is not as a ruler or a god, but as a force that fulfills the gaps between time, life, and death for humanity, in contrast to the Borderland itself. It represents an illusion of autonomy, with the games serving to determine an individual's will to live. The Joker's nature suggests a connection to concepts of purgatory and the grim reaper.

Media

Manga

Alice in Borderland, written and illustrated by Haro Aso, was serialized in Shogakukan's [[Shōnen manga|Template:Transliteration manga]] magazine Shōnen Sunday S magazine from November 25, 2010,[1] to March 25, 2015,[2] and later moved to Weekly Shōnen Sunday on April 8, 2015,[3][4] and finished on March 2, 2016.[5][6] Shogakukan collected its 65 individual chapters in 18 Template:Transliteration volumes, published from April 18, 2011,[7] to April 18, 2016.[8]

On July 9, 2021, Viz Media announced that it had licensed the series for English publication.[9] It was published in nine two-in-one volumes published from March 15, 2022, to March 19, 2024.[10][11]

Other stories

Six side stories, later included in the main series volumes, were published in Weekly Shōnen Sunday from 2012 to 2015:

A spin-off series, titled Template:Nihongo, written by Aso and illustrated by Takayoshi Kuroda, was published in Shogakukan's [[Seinen manga|Template:Transliteration manga]] magazine Monthly Sunday Gene-X from August 19, 2015,[24] to February 19, 2018.[25][26] Shogakukan collected its chapters in eight Template:Transliteration volumes, published from January 18, 2016,[27] to March 19, 2017.[28]

Another series, titled Template:Nihongo, was serialized in Weekly Shōnen Sunday from October 14, 2020,[29][30][31] to January 20, 2021.[32][33] Shogakukan collected its chapters in two Template:Transliteration volumes, released on December 11, 2020,[34] and February 18, 2021.[35] In October 2025, Viz Media announced that it had licensed Alice in Borderland Retry for English-language publication that is set to debut in Q3 2026.[36]

Volumes

Alice in Borderland

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Alice on Border Road

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Alice in Borderland: Retry

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Original video animation

The series was adapted into a three-episode original video animation (OVA) produced by Silver Link and Connect and directed by Hideki Tachibana.[37][38] The first OVA episode was bundled with the limited edition of the 12th volume of the manga on October 17, 2014.[39] The second OVA episode was bundled with the limited edition of the 13th volume of the manga on December 18, 2014.[40] The third and last OVA episode was bundled with the limited edition of the 14th volume of the manga on February 18, 2015.[41] The opening theme is "NEXTAGE", performed by the Japanese female idol group i☆Ris.[42]

Sentai Filmworks licensed the OVAs for international distribution.[43][44] MVM Entertainment licensed the OVA in the United Kingdom and Ireland.[45]

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Live-action series

A live-action series, produced by Netflix and directed by Shinsuke Sato, premiered on December 10, 2020, in over 190 countries worldwide simultaneously. It stars Kento Yamazaki as Ryohei Arisu and Tao Tsuchiya as Yuzuha Usagi.[46][47] In December 2020, a second season was announced, which premiered on December 22, 2022.[48][49] In September 2023, it was announced that the series was renewed for a third season.[50] It premiered on September 25, 2025, and features an original story beyond the manga.[51][52]

Reception

As of March 2016, Alice in Borderland had over 1.3 million copies in circulation.[6] Volume 11 reached the 48th place on the weekly Oricon manga charts and, as of June 22, 2014, has sold 21,496 copies.[53]

References

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External links

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This article incorporates text from the Wikipedia article "Alice in Borderland", available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License.Retrieved 2026-02-24.

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