Sunday, 26 April 2026

Unemployed Killer Support Group by Rio - Blog Tour

 


'Locker is a nearly-blind sniper, and after losing his job, he joins a support group for unemployed assassins. All of the members were once feared, but now they're losers who help and hinder one another. After overhearing a conversation at a restaurant, Locker believes he's identified the man that took his sight. Finally he has one shot at revenge - hopefully this is one he doesn't miss.'

Losing your job because of health reasons sucks, and it's something that I personally have been through, and so the opening scenes of Unemployed Killer Support Group were ones that allowed me to instantly connect with our lead character, Locker. Though I've never been a hitman for hire I have found my life turned upside down by a sudden and unexpected health issue, and Lockers frustrations of his life changing drastically without warning, of not knowing if you have financial stability, of feeling lost, all felt incredibly true to real life. Fortunately for Locker, he doesn't have to go through things alone. 

After losing his job as a sniper thanks to his failing eyesight, Locker finds himself in the middle of a specialised support group, one where other hired killers come to try and help each other through losing their job through a variety of reasons. Locker is the only disabled person there, but other members of the group are facing their own struggles, such as Maze, who lost her work after a job leads to her killing the wrong person and learning that her husband was cheating on her. Everyone in the group has their own unique and unusual story, and discovering what these are and how they came out is a big part of the fun of the book.

As Locker tries to adjust to his new life he overhears someone in a restaurant, a voice that's eerily familiar, talking about how he attacked a guy, hitting him over the head and taking his customised sniper rifle. Convinced that this is the man who blinded him Locker realises there's not much he can do in his newly disabled state, and chooses to let it go. However, when fate brings this man across Lockers path a second time he comes to the realisation that he can't move on from this, and sets out to find out who his attacker was and get revenge.

Unemployed Killer Support Group is a wonderfully dark comedy, a book that doesn't take itself too seriously; just look at the concept and tell me that it's going to be a serious tale. There are a number of moments that will make you laugh out loud, twisted jokes that somehow never come across as gross or mean, but end up being quite charming because our core cast of characters are presented as pretty decent people; despite the murder. It helps that our core cast of characters are all broken, kind of pathetic people, and so you end up feeling sorry for them more often than not, and by the end you're rooting for them to come out on top even if most of them should be in jail for their crimes.

As a disabled person I also really liked that Rio, the writer and artist on the book, didn't use Locker's disability as a joke. Yes, it's used to some comedic effect at time, but Locker himself is never the butt of the joke. You're never told to look down on him or feel bad for him because he's somehow lesser now that he's blind, instead you look down on him for being a fuck up, for being a killer, and for failing to get his life together way before going blind. It's also nice to have a disabled character as a lead where their disability isn't something that makes him special, nor is it something that gets cured or altered in some unrealistic way. Locker's blindness is just a part of him now, and he's having to adapt and change to live with his new normal. Despite the absurdity of the book his disability is never an absurd factor, and for that I appreciate it.

Unemployed Killer Support Group is a wonderfully fun, self contained manga that feels grounded and realistic, whilst also managing to be farcical and ridiculous. It's a fine line, but one that the book walks wonderfully. It reminds me of some of my favourite comedy film, and I could see the story getting adapted to film someday, as there are times it feels like it's more structured like a movie than a book, and I think that's something that really helps you to connect with it and read it in one sitting because you just can't put it down. Easily one of the most delightful manga books I've ever read, and one that I'd recommend in shot.


Unemployed Killer Support Group is available now from Titan Manga.




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