All right, so…I watched the TV series of Alice in Borderland. I binge-watched it, actually, because it was so good. So when I went into the Forbidden Planet store in Southampton, I didn’t really have a choice but to buy the first in the manga series. (That’s not exactly true. I did have a choice. I just ended up giving into that part of me that really just wanted to buy the book).
So, obviously, I was already aware of what was going to happen in Borderland, when Arisu, Chota and Karube found themselves in that world. But I still found it interesting to see the manga’s version of them appearing there. The fireworks held a much higher significance than they seemed to in the TV series…and it made me wonder just what the fireworks signified in the manga version.
I found the first game they ended up playing to be quite interesting. I didn’t quite understand the whole fortune reading thing, but it was obvious that the worse fortune they drew, the harder a question they would receive. And, of course, the final question required an almost impossible answer of how big is the Earth’s population. Considering that burning arrows had been shot at the group every time a question was answered wrongly, that threat made the game feel so much more intense. And Arisu figuring out the answer to the actual game, even if he didn’t know the answer to his question, worked really well, as the clues he picked up on made sense as soon as he put voice to what he’d realised.
I did find that the artwork for Chota’s character made him seem very juvenile…almost childishly so. He also fit a stereotype that I often see in Japanese manga: that of a perverted man (though it’s normally an older man) more interested in chasing after women than anything else. Honestly, out of the three of them (Arisu, Chota and Karube), I felt he did come across as the weaker character (sorry, Chota).
The second part of this manga was the game of Tag…which the TV series had clearly followed from this book. I enjoyed the inclusion of a familiar character, who was my favourite in the series. And it was particularly interesting to see his gameplan, in comparison to the rest of those caught in the game. And it was great to see Usagi appear in the book, too, even though she and Arisu didn’t have that much interaction.
I would like to read the next books in this series, as I’m really interesting to see how the characters were first written and how they compare to their TV counterparts. Plus, the different medium will probably allow me to learn more about the characters than I was able to see in the series.
