Two Girls, Two Worlds

A story of rivals, exiles, and the truth between dimensions.
Action · Fantasy · Sci-fi · Anime style · Ongoing series
In their everyday life, Ele and Layla can’t stand each other. In Eldoran — the epic dimension they keep getting pulled into — they are the only two people in the universe capable of saving it. Neither of them is happy about this.
Genre
Fantasy / Sci-fi
Format
Ongoing series
Language
English
Status
Coming Soon
Cover illustration — Two Girls, Two Worlds. Ele Studios, 2026. AI-illustrated — anime style, two worlds, one story.
The premise
Ele and Layla are rivals. Not in the way teenagers say they hate each other and secretly agree — they genuinely, consistently, make each other’s lives worse. Ele is sharp-tongued and stubborn, from the wrong side of town. Layla is elegant and cutting, and she knows exactly where to aim.
Then there is Zion. A homeless man who appears and disappears without explanation, watching them both. And there is Eldoran — the epic dimension they keep getting pulled into without warning, without consent, and without the option of saying no.
In Eldoran, the dynamic inverts completely. Ele becomes Princess Antea, heir to a kingdom under siege. Layla becomes Alyal, her most devoted guardian. The girl who spent every day trying to humiliate Ele now takes a sword in the shoulder for her without hesitation.
In one world they are enemies. In the other they are the only thing standing between a kingdom and the end of everything. They are not sure which world is real.
The answer, when it comes, is that both are. Eldoran is not a dream. It is where they are from. The everyday world — school, money, sarcasm, bad coffee — is the exile. They were sent there as children for something they did, something they don’t remember, something they are slowly, episode by episode, beginning to understand.

The Characters
Ele / Princess Antea
First protagonist
Violet bob, elephant ears that nobody seems to notice. Tough, independent, strong sense of justice. Comes from nothing and has learned to weaponise it. In Eldoran she is a princess who leads by instinct — and can’t understand why that comes so naturally. Animal totem: elephant.
Layla / Alyal
Second protagonist
White hair, rich and used to winning. In the everyday world she attacks first and always goes for the economic angle. In Eldoran she is Antea’s most loyal guardian — a role reversal she finds deeply, personally inconvenient. The arrogance hides something she hasn’t examined yet.
Zion
The controller
Appears as a homeless man in the everyday world. In Eldoran he is the Royal Adviser who controls passage between dimensions through a ring he always wears. He is not their friend — he is their supervisor, evaluating whether they’ve earned the right to go home. The missions are tests. He does not tell them this.
The Empire
Antagonist force
A conquering empire expanding across the universe of Eldoran. Only the kingdom of Eldoran — with its unique combination of technology and magic — has ever managed to hold it back. The artefact they are searching for is the reason why. And why the Empire wants it first.
Visual Style
Two Girls, Two Worlds runs two visual registers in parallel — and the contrast between them is part of the storytelling. The everyday world is clean, simple, grounded. Eldoran is vast, operatic, and lit like a mangaka fever dream.