
From the very first death game, Alice in Borderland felt eerily familiar like it had inherited the dark soul of Death Note, minus the supernatural notebook. While not a direct adaptation or confirmed inspiration, the thematic overlap was impossible to ignore. Both series threw viewers into high-stakes arenas where survival wasn’t just physical, it was psychological, ethical, and deeply personal.
In Death Note, Light Yagami played god with a pen, convinced he could create a better world through selective murder. In Alice in Borderland, Arisu wasn’t trying to change the world, he was just trying to survive it. But both leads were forced to confront brutal moral dilemmas: who deserves to live, and what does it mean to be good in a twisted system?
The control dynamics were different. Light held all the power in his hand — literally. Arisu, Usagi, and the others? They were at the mercy of faceless architects and unforgiving games. Yet, the emotional toll hit the same nerve. Trust, sacrifice, and psychological decay pulsed through every choice.
Trending
Alice in Borderland felt like Death Note’s chaotic, adrenaline-fueled evolution
At its core, Death Note was a battle of wits. A slow-burn chess match between Light and L, wrapped in shadows and philosophical dread. It asked if intelligence justified murder. Alice in Borderland, however, flipped the chessboard and lit it on fire. The show forced players to think fast, move faster, and question everything. It wasn’t just about winning. It was about why you kept playing.
Still, both series made viewers complicit. We cheered for characters who crossed lines. We rooted for morally gray decisions, then sat in silence when the cost hit. The thrill wasn’t just in the twisty plots or cool aesthetics. It was in the way both stories asked: what would you do if you had that notebook or faced that next game?
Sure, one story played out in a warped Tokyo filled with mind games, and the other in a supernatural world scribbled in names and deaths. But in tone, mood, and moral questioning, Death Note and Alice in Borderland felt like two sides of the same terrifying coin. And maybe, just maybe, that eerie familiarity wasn’t an accident but an evolution.
For more such recommendations, check out TV on Koimoi!
Must Read: Harry Potter TV Series: HBO Invests $1.27B, Reportedly Building Mini-Town At Leavesden Studios
Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube | Google News