Alice in Borderland Season 3, which premiered on September 25, 2025, features a waitress named Alice. She was introduced very briefly in the final moments, but her presence is highly symbolic. We do not see her face; the camera zooms in on her name badge, which reads "Alice," suggesting that she might be the next central figure in the ongoing "game" cycle.
The scene is significant as it is a direct nod to Lewis Carroll's "Alice", reinforcing the idea that the name in the series carries destiny. In this one, Arisu, which is the Japanese pronunciation of Alice, was the focus.
Therefore, the waitress could be the new chosen player for the next season. The scene serves as both an epilogue and a possible setup for a spin-off. All of these things point towards just one thing. The Borderland's story is far from getting over.
How does Alice in Borderland end? The appearance of the waitress named Alice explored
Arisu and others are finally free, and the quakes are no longer the looming threat. However, the ending also hints at their increasing occurrence worldwide, which could hint at a larger apocalyptic event eventually. The watchman also told Arisu that thousands of other quakes will happen soon. This further hints that the show is preparing to include more players from around the world, not just Japan.
In the final scene, the show shifts from Tokyo to a setting in the U.S. The two men are chatting about sports as part of their usual routine; nothing seems intriguing or extraordinary until a waitress named Alice enters, suggesting that the show is far from over. Additionally, the scene hints to the audience that the ordinary waitress you're watching right now could be your main character in the next season.
As mentioned, Alice's face remains hidden, seemingly done intentionally to draw attention solely to her name and the symbolic visual resembling the passing of the baton.
What else does the scene symbolise in Alice in Borderland?

The final scene, set in America, teases that the new cycle could be set in this new country outside Tokyo in the next season of Alice in Borderland. Naturally, instead of Arisu, the narrative could see a new Alice in a unique cultural setting. The earthquake also hinted at a greater and more brutal worldwide crisis, opening the door to include international characters and further expanding the game's scale.
The series has already established that names matter, as Chishiya, Kuina, and Arisu all have symbolic connections. Therefore, naming the waitress Alice in the show is locking her into that destiny.
This highlights how the show also aims to explore the ordinariness of the character. In fact, the character's transformation would be more drastic and challenging in this version, as Alice would start in a mundane role before being thrown into chaos, unlike Arisu, who was a regular gamer before becoming a leader in Alice in Borderland.