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Orbit Guard Double-Edge Push Dagger - Galaxy Blade

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9.99


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Cosmic Retention Double-Edge Push Dagger - Galaxy Blade

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7463/image_1920?unique=b6a7e7b

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This double-edge push dagger puts a galaxy blade on a no-nonsense Texas backup. The fixed-blade design rides compact and ready, giving you solid push-dagger control without any switchblade, OTF knife, or automatic knife mechanism to worry about. A textured T-handle locks into your grip for confident retention, quick indexing, and discreet EDC carry. For Texas buyers who like a little cosmic flair on a serious tool, it’s a small piece that makes a big statement in the drawer and in the hand.

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FX641ST

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What This Double-Edge Push Dagger Really Is

The double-edge push dagger is one of those tools that doesn’t pretend to be anything it’s not. This one happens to wear a galaxy blade, but under the color it’s still a compact fixed blade meant to lock into your grip and stay put. No flippers, no springs, no sliders—just a push-forward spear point that does its job when you’re up close and out of room.

In a world where every site wants to call everything a switchblade, this isn’t a switchblade, it isn’t an OTF knife, and it isn’t an automatic knife. It’s a T-handle fixed blade that sits between your fingers and points straight out from your fist. Texas collectors know the type: backup-sized, easy to hide, hard to knock loose.

Mechanism Truth: Fixed-Blade Push Dagger, Not a Switchblade

Mechanically, this knife is simple on purpose. The blade is permanently fixed into the T-handle—no pivot, no button, no automatic knife mechanism waiting to fire. That alone sets it apart from an OTF knife or a side-opening switchblade. With those, you’ve got a blade that travels from closed to open by way of a spring or slider. Here, the blade never moves. The only thing moving is your hand.

That simplicity is the push dagger’s whole story. You index it between your fingers, the textured handle fills your palm, and the double-edge spear point extends forward. The control comes from how it sits in your hand, not from some clever opening trick. If you’re the kind of Texas buyer who has a drawer full of autos and OTF knives, this piece scratches a different itch: instant readiness with no deployment step at all.

How It Differs from OTF Knives and Automatic Knives

An OTF knife sends the blade out the front of the handle with a thumb slider. A classic switchblade or side-opening automatic knife kicks the blade out the side when you hit a button. This push dagger bypasses all of that. You draw it, and it’s already at work.

That means no timing, no half-deployed blade, and no concern about whether the spring is tired. In a collection, that makes it a good counterpart to your more complex pieces—a reminder that sometimes the simplest mechanism is still the most decisive.

Texas Carry Reality for a Double-Edge Push Dagger

Texas law has loosened over the years, and most of the heat has been around whether a switchblade, automatic knife, or OTF knife is legal to carry. These days, Texas buyers can own all three, but you still want to know where a push dagger fits in.

This piece is a fixed-blade push dagger with a double-edge spear-point profile. It’s not a folding knife, it’s not an automatic knife, and it doesn’t deploy like an OTF knife or switchblade. From a Texas carry perspective, that often makes it easier to explain: it’s a small fixed blade with a T-handle, built as a discreet backup tool.

Every Texas city and county can treat edged tools a little differently in practice, so a serious collector will do what they always do—check the latest local rules before treating any push dagger as everyday carry. But as a piece in the collection, it sits comfortably alongside your autos and OTF knives without bringing the same level of legal baggage those once carried.

Discreet EDC Backup in a Texas Lifestyle

In Texas, most folks who buy a push dagger aren’t looking for a primary ranch knife. That’s what your locking folders and bigger fixed blades are for. This lives in the backup category. It rides in a boot, waistband, or small pocket sheath, staying out of sight until you want the kind of grip a push dagger delivers—straight-line force, tight retention, and minimal blade to snag.

For the collector who already has a favorite automatic knife for daily tasks and maybe an OTF knife for the pure mechanical satisfaction, this galaxy push dagger fills the niche of compact defensive backup with attitude.

Design Story: Galaxy Blade, Workmanlike Handle

The first thing you notice is the blade. The galaxy graphic gives you purples, pinks, and starfield speckling that feel more sci-fi than stockyard. A row of circular cutouts runs down the centerline, breaking up the color and keeping the profile light. The edges themselves are left clean so the double-edge spear point still reads as a serious cutting surface, not just decoration.

Then your hand finds the handle. The T-handle is all business: black, deeply textured, shaped to sit between your fingers like it was molded there. Those curved finger grooves act as a knuckle-style guard, helping the knife stay planted under pressure. You’re not here for fidget factor—the push dagger grip is about staying put when it counts.

Double-Edge Spear Point for Purposeful Control

A double-edge push dagger earns its keep by offering equal performance no matter how it rotates in your grip. The spear-point geometry on this blade keeps the tip centered, so your force stays in line with your fist. Both edges are plain, mirroring each other, which is what you want in a push-forward piece: predictable penetration, clean withdrawal, and no dragged serrations to hang you up.

Fixed-Blade Confidence for Texas Collectors

Collectors who know their way around a switchblade or OTF knife appreciate one quiet truth: a simple fixed blade almost never lets you down. No lock to fail, no button to gum up, no slider to grit up in a Texas dust storm. This push dagger shares that trait. The blade is set, the handle is textured, and if you can close your hand, you can use it.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Double-Edge Push Daggers

Is a double-edge push dagger the same as a switchblade or OTF knife?

No. A double-edge push dagger like this one is a fixed blade. The galaxy spear-point stays in one position and doesn’t fold, slide, or spring out. A switchblade is a side-opening automatic knife that uses a button and a spring. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front with a slider. All three can live in a Texas collection, but they aren’t the same tool and they don’t use the same mechanism.

Are double-edge push daggers legal to own and carry in Texas?

Texas has become far friendlier toward knives over the years, including automatic knives, OTF knives, and what used to be called switchblades. A small push dagger like this is generally legal to own statewide. Carry rules can depend on blade length, location, and age, and local ordinances can change. A serious Texas buyer will do what they do with any knife—confirm the current law where they live and where they plan to carry. When in doubt, treat it as a collection piece or home-defense backup rather than your walk-into-the-courthouse companion.

Why would a collector add a push dagger if they already own automatics and OTF knives?

Because it fills a different role. Your automatic knife is your quick one-hand opener for everyday use. Your OTF knife is your mechanical showpiece and rapid-deploy tool. This double-edge push dagger is your close-quarters backup—small footprint, big control, and zero deployment lag. The galaxy blade gives it display appeal, but the T-handle and fixed design give it a job. For a Texas collector, that mix of personality and purpose is what earns it space in the drawer.

Texas Collector Identity: Why This Piece Belongs

Owning this push dagger says you’ve moved past arguing over terms and know exactly what you’re holding. It’s not a switchblade, it’s not an OTF knife, and it’s not trying to compete with your favorite automatic knife. It’s a fixed double-edge push dagger with a galaxy blade and a grip that means business—a compact Texas backup that adds a cosmic note to a serious collection.

If you’re the kind of buyer who can explain the difference between an OTF and a side-opener without looking it up, this piece will feel right at home. It doesn’t need a lecture or a sales pitch. You pick it up, feel the T-handle lock in, catch that starfield along the blade, and you already know why it belongs with the rest of your Texas steel.