The Ugly Truth of Alliance: Snakes, Two-Faces, and the Few Who Actually Have Balls

The Ugly Truth Of Alliance: Snakes, Two-Faces, And The Few Who Actually Have Balls

Alliance on Prime Video is supposed to be a strategy show, but it has turned into a festival of backstabbing, fake smiles, and weak people pretending to be smart. Alliances form and die faster than daily episodes. Most contestants are playing the same tired game—smile to your face, stab in the back. A few stand out for the wrong reasons.

Nikhil and Mini: Professional Flip-Floppers
Nikhil Chinapa is the king of convenience. He jumped ship from his first alliance without blinking, leaving everyone wondering who he’ll betray next. Mini Mathur talks sharp but their pair runs on one rule: loyalty only if it benefits them right now. They are sly, calculating, and completely untrustworthy. Classic manipulators who make the game feel cheap.

Aly’s Cunning Moves
Aly Goni came in and immediately started poking old wounds, especially with Kushal. He doesn’t just play—he stirs shit on purpose, gives warnings, and positions himself like a smart player. It’s cold and effective. He knows exactly how to use history and new groups to his advantage. Cunning? Yes. Respectable? Not really.

Arsalan: The Biggest Disappointment
Arsalan Goni was supposed to be a solid friend or ally. Instead, he turned out weak and unreliable. Kushal apologizes, tries to keep things straight, but Arsalan stays difficult and distant. A so-called friend who disappears or creates drama when it matters most. Total fall from grace. In this house, even “bros” are temporary.

Payal Gaming: Sweet Face, Forked Tongue
Payal looks sweet and has shared her deepfake pain, which is sad and real. But in the game she plays both sides. Nice on camera, shifting when it suits her. The “double mouth” tag fits—she disarms people with that gaming-girl charm while quietly protecting her own spot. Not the worst, but definitely not straightforward.

Ruhee Dosani: Finally, Some Real Air
Ruhee is one of the very few who feels genuine. She speaks her mind, stays loyal to her team’s goals, calls out the nonsense, and doesn’t seem exhausted by constant fake politics. She hugs opponents after losses and plays hard without the constant whispering. In a house full of masks, she’s refreshingly direct. Worth supporting.

Kushal Tandon: Brat, But the Real Main Character
Kushal is loud, aggressive, and doesn’t take shit. He fights with Vanshaj, throws direct challenges, and refuses to play small or safe. Yes, he comes across as a brat. Yes, he has arrogance. But unlike the silent snakes, he says enemy is enemy, sorry when needed, and keeps pushing forward. In this sea of cowards and plotters, his raw, unfiltered style is a relief. He actually feels like the central force of the show.

Bottom Line

Most of them are absolute sly operators—building alliances only to break them the moment it’s convenient. Nikhil-Mini flip for advantage. Aly schemes smartly. Arsalan let his friends down. Payal plays the sweet card while watching her own back. The game rewards these people.

That’s why Ruhee Dosani feels like fresh air and Kushal feels like the only real powerhouse. They’re not perfect, but they’re honest in their energy. Everyone else is just acting.

If you’re watching, root for these two. The rest deserve to get exposed. Alliance proves one thing clearly: in reality TV, the biggest skill is how well you can lie while looking someone in the eyes. Brutal, but that’s the game.

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