Chisato and Mahiro are back, still living together, still working as assassins, and still completely clueless when it comes to being “normal.” On the surface, they’re skilled killers who can take down targets with precision, but once they’re off the clock, everything falls apart. They bicker over chores, argue about money, and struggle with the most basic social situations. For them, shopping for groceries or talking to strangers can feel harder than pulling the trigger on a mission.
Their everyday lives are filled with these small, frustrating clashes. Chisato is carefree, playful, and often reckless, while Mahiro is reserved, serious, and constantly stressed by her partner’s impulsive ways. That imbalance causes chaos not only at home but during their jobs too—like when arguments about splitting bills or deciding who cooks dinner carry over into high-stakes missions. What should be clean, efficient assassinations often turn into messy (and funny) disasters.
Things get even more complicated when new assassins appear, rivals who challenge both their reputation and their relationship. These run-ins force Chisato and Mahiro to face uncomfortable truths: that while they’re good at killing, they’re terrible at living. Still, through all the chaos—gunfights, close calls, and awkward encounters—they keep stumbling forward together, somehow managing to survive.
At its heart, Baby Assassins Everyday is about the push and pull between two very different personalities who are stuck together. It’s not just bullets and blood; it’s dirty dishes, late-night arguments, and quiet moments of friendship buried under all the noise. The more they fight, the more they realize that neither of them could really make it alone. In the end, being assassins might be dangerous, but learning how to share a life might just be the hardest mission of all.