Table of Contents
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Allison
ć¢ćŖć½ć³(Allison) is a Light Novel about two teenagers in a world with two continents split right down the middle that are eternally at war until the end of the first light novel.
Reviews
Allison
My biggest gripe with Allison is that it comes off as quite naĆÆve, going all-in on the Japanese Kumbaya clichĆ©. This is fineā¦at firstā¦at the end of the first volumeā¦but gets more grating with each installment.
The reason this isnāt that big of a problem is that the series is only 4 volumes total, so it just barely overstays its welcome.
Besides that though? Yeah, itās alright. I think the worldbuilding actually kinda works if we take the intended theme (which is Japanese Kumbaya-related) into accountā¦as it kinda makes sense. The issue is that past the first volume, there are serious issues with the worldbuilding keeping everything in orderā¦because, while it makes sense in that initial volumeās premiseā¦it doesnāt make sense longer-term.
My personal approach would have been to treat the first volume as a one-off/pilot/preview like you sometimes see with manga. Then I would have taken the time to work on the worldbuilding a bit moreā¦and then I would have continued.
But thatās why I said it just barely overstays its welcome.
I realized only now that I kinda failed to elaborate on what the problem with the worldbuilding isā¦so uhā¦Iāll elaborate with more details in the future, but the gist of it is that the world of Allison features one pangaea-style continent which is split exactly in half. After millenia passed, the people of the two continents mutually discovered each-other and then, seemingly, realized that it makes more sense to hate the guy across the street than the next-door neighbor.
Each continent united into mega-alliances (the West into an autocratic Empire, the East into a democratic Federation) which then occasionally went to war with each-other: the aim being to exterminate the other side. Both continents frequently bicker about everythingā¦including which continent humanity originated from.
The first volume ends with Allison and her boyfriend whose name I suddenly forgot discovering an ancient cave painting that evilmen aim to destroy. This cave painting depicts the sacred symbols of each continent side-by-side showing that, in the past, both peoples were united as one. This then leads to both side realizing that fighting each-other is pointless and dumb and they should stop ā which they do.
There are a lot of issues with that, but Iām gonna leave it there for now.
Lillia & Treize
I would write something here, but I either stopped reading during the first volume or after finishing the first volume. I wasnāt really as into it as I was into Allison. Again, the worldbuilding cannot possibly maintain a story past the first volume of Allison.
The Japanese Kumbaya thing is also still going so yaaaaay.
Anime
There is an anime which adapts both Allison and Lillia into a single seriesā¦which is an interesting choice. Iāve had it in my backlog for a while and Iāve been intending to watch it for a whileā¦initially I avoided it because I wanted to finish reading Lillia & Treize firstā¦but that aināt happening for a while, so it might be the only way I experience Lilliaās story.
First Impressions (of Episode 1)
I decided to watch the first episode today (2025-08-28) and my first impressions (not having finished the episode) areā¦lukewarm.
Iām not impressed with the voice actor for Wil and I think the tone of the series is completely off from what I would have expected it to be. So far, itās a lot more chill than the story came off in the light novel ā despite it being very faithful to the source material.
What Iām interested in is whatāll happen when the more action/tense stuff comes up. Though who knows if Iāll get that far.
Trivilinks
- Both of the above lead you to fan translations of Allison and Lillia. Itās where I found the novels and read them.