Alice in Borderland: Why It’s WORSE To Be a Dealer Than a Player
The following contains spoilers for Alice in Borderland, now streaming on Netflix.
Despite all of that, being a player isn’t the worst thing a person could be. Being a dealer, someone who sets up the games and watches them play out behind-the-scenes, might just be a worse fate.
Alice In Borderland’s Dealers Sacrifice Their Humanity
Dealers are chosen when they first enter the Borderland and are led to a secret hideaway where an elaborate set-up of monitors and desks is laid out. It’s unclear whether they’re chosen randomly or strategically. Their job is to set up the games, watch players go through them and clean up the bodies after. Fundamentally, dealers and players aren’t so different from each other: their survival depends on how long their visa lasts. What makes them different is that they kill players through their game set-up and their survival is dependent on the number of players who die. The higher the death count, the longer the dealers live. If the players clear the game, it essentially means death for the dealers.
It’s part of the reason why Momoka volunteers to be the witch in the Witch Hunt. She has seen first-hand how the games turn everyone into mindless killing machines, and she’s afraid she’ll end up being the same. She wants to believe that there is still hope, that someone who break the vicious cycle of dealer versus player. The games are cruelly designed to reveal the worst parts of humanity in both the players and the dealers.
Dealers In Alice In Borderland Have No Control
Because the dealers can’t control who lives or dies, they just watch the games unfold and pray they’ll be “lucky” enough to live for a few more days. They’re literally placing their lives in the hands of others, waiting for either salvation or doom. It can’t be denied that there is an imbalance of power between the players and dealers, but it’s an illusion: the dealers never had power in the first place because they never had a say in when they lived or died.
Dealers Get No Second Chances In Alice In Borderland
If the players complete the set of number cards, they’re given the opportunity to go on to the next stage which is the face-card games–in other words, going up against the citizens of the Borderland. If the players manage to clear those, then there’s a chance that they can go back to the original world. While the games are infinitely more difficult, given the fact that the citizens have been there much longer and the games harder to clear, the players at least have a chance to live.
However, dealers don’t get a second chance. If the players find all the playing cards, it’s game over for the dealers, and they’re all killed, regardless of how many days they have left on their visas. What’s more, if they were to ever reveal to anyone other than their fellow dealers, who they are, they would be shot with a laser. Their every move is being monitored by those higher up in the chain of command–most likely the citizens.



