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TL;DR
"Skool Kill" is the romanised name of a Japanese rock band. The Japanese-language searches around it — skool kill ライブ, skool kill ギター, skool kill ベース — translate to "live", "guitar", and "bass" respectively, which means people are looking for live shows, guitar tabs, and bass tabs. None of these have anything to do with skool.com, the community SaaS. "Kill" in this context is a band name, not a button. If you actually wanted to delete or kill a skool.com account, that's a different question covered at the bottom of this page. If you wanted the band, the next two sections give you concrete places to look for tabs, live videos, and discography.

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Who Skool Kill is
Skool Kill is a Japanese rock band with a small but active following. Like most Japan-based indie acts, their main online footprint is on YouTube, Niconico, X (Twitter), and Japanese-language fan blogs rather than Spotify or Apple Music — though some of their tracks do show up on the major streaming services. Live shows happen mostly in Tokyo and Osaka venue circuits. Setlists rotate, and fan communities track which songs were played at which show. If you're getting into the band, the standard discovery path is the same as any J-rock act: find their official YouTube channel, check the most recent live recording, then dig back through their discography. The band is small enough that they read replies on social, so if you want a tab or a setlist, asking directly works.
Where to find Skool Kill tabs and live recordings
For guitar tabs (skool kill ギター) and bass tabs (skool kill ベース), the best places are Japanese tab sites like J-Total Music, U-Fret, and Gakufu.gakki — these are the JP-language equivalents of Songsterr and Ultimate Guitar. Search the song title in Japanese for the highest hit rate. Ultimate Guitar itself does carry some Japanese band tabs but coverage is patchy for smaller acts. For live recordings (skool kill ライブ), YouTube is the obvious first stop, then Niconico, then live-show fan accounts on X who upload short clips after gigs. Bandcamp and SoundCloud sometimes host live EPs from indie Japanese bands too. If a song has no tab anywhere, transcribing by ear is the fallback — pitch-shifting apps like Moises or Capo make this much easier than it used to be.
Why this gets confused with skool.com
The romanised band name "skool kill" overlaps with English-language searches like "how do I kill a Skool account" or "kill my Skool subscription." Search engines mash these together. If you came here because you assumed "kill" was a Skool platform action, that's not a thing — Skool doesn't use the word kill anywhere in its UI. You can pause, cancel, delete, or downgrade. Each of those is a different button. tools4skool, the workflow extension that sits on top of skool.com, also doesn't have a kill action — though we do have a Churn Saver that catches members the moment they hit cancel and sends a recovery DM in under sixty seconds. That's the closest thing to a "don't kill this account" feature on the SaaS side.
If you actually wanted to delete or cancel a skool.com account
Three different actions get conflated. Cancel a paid membership inside someone else's group: open the group, click your profile, choose Manage Subscription, then Cancel. You stay a free member; you stop being charged. Leave a Skool group entirely: open the group, click the gear icon, choose Leave Community. You're out, but your skool.com login still works. Delete your skool.com account: go to Settings → Account → Delete Account. This wipes the login and removes you from every group at once. If you own a paid Skool group as a creator, you can't delete the account until you've handled member refunds and shut down the group itself. tools4skool can help on the way out — Churn Saver catches members trying to cancel and triggers a last-shot recovery DM, which often saves enough revenue to make the rest of the workflow worth keeping.
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