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Ancient Glyph Quick-Flip Assisted Pocket Knife - Green

Price:

14.99


Solar Flare Quick-Deploy Tanto Spring-Assisted Knife - Gold
Solar Flare Quick-Deploy Tanto Spring-Assisted Knife - Gold
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Ancient Flame Anime-Inspired Flipper Pocket Knife - Red Fire
Ancient Flame Anime-Inspired Flipper Pocket Knife - Red Fire
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Emerald Relic Quick-Flip Assisted Pocket Knife - Green Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2521/image_1920?unique=acf80b8

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This assisted opening pocket knife brings anime energy into real Texas EDC. Hit the flipper and the 3.5-inch Japanese tanto blade snaps out with clean, spring-driven authority, then locks down on a solid liner lock. The emerald accents, script-style blade markings, and black diamond handle inlays give it that relic-from-another-world look, while the pocket clip and 4.5-inch closed length keep it practical. It’s for the Texan who wants fast action, honest steel, and a little character in their everyday carry.

14.99 14.99 USD 14.99

PF52A

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Japanese Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Material Themed
Theme Anime
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock

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What This Assisted Opening Pocket Knife Really Is

This knife is a spring-assisted opening pocket knife built for everyday carry, not a switchblade and not an OTF knife. You start the move with the flipper tab, the internal spring takes over, and the Japanese tanto blade snaps into place. That’s the honest mechanism story, and for a Texas buyer who cares about the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, it matters.

Closed, it rides at 4.5 inches with a pocket clip and a slim profile. Open, you’ve got an 8-inch overall length and a 3.5-inch matte-black tanto blade with emerald green accents that look like they walked out of an anime frame. It’s everyday-ready, but it has enough personality to earn a spot in a Texas collector’s display.

Assisted Opening Pocket Knife Action vs. Automatic and OTF

An assisted opening pocket knife like this one is a different animal than a true automatic knife or an OTF knife. With an automatic or classic switchblade, the blade deploys from a button or release with no help from your hand once that button is pressed. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on a track. This piece is neither of those.

Here, you nudge the flipper tab. That manual start is what separates assisted opening from automatic. Once you break the detent, the internal spring kicks in and drives the blade the rest of the way. It’s fast, crisp, and satisfying, but it stays on the right side of the assisted category instead of sliding into switchblade territory.

Mechanism Details for the Collector Mind

The flipper tab is matched to a liner lock, which keeps the frame slim and the action smooth. The tanto profile gives you a strong piercing tip and a straight secondary edge that’s easy to sharpen. Jimping along the spine near the handle lets your thumb settle in for controlled cuts. For a Texas buyer who already owns an automatic knife or an OTF, this assisted opener fills that in-between role: fast enough for one-handed work, simple enough to tune and maintain.

Anime Relic Style Meets Texas EDC Reality

Visually, this knife leans hard into that anime relic feel: emerald green accents tracing the blade line, white script-style markings on the steel, black diamonds nested in a green center handle panel framed by white end caps. It looks like a weapon a character would draw in a boss fight, but in your pocket it’s still a straightforward assisted opening pocket knife built for real use.

The matte-black blade kills glare and lets the green pop without turning the knife into a toy. The handle’s themed panels are there for style, but the ribbing, shape, and jimping keep it planted in the hand. Collectors who already own more traditional automatic knives or OTF knives will appreciate that this one doesn’t try to imitate them; it brings its own Japanese-inspired tanto look to the drawer.

Size, Balance, and Everyday Tasks

At 3.5 inches of blade, this assisted opening knife lives right in the Texas EDC sweet spot. Big enough for packages, light utility, and ranch-gate chores, small enough not to feel like overkill in town. The rectangular handle balances the weight of the steel, and that flipper tab doubles as a guard when open, keeping your hand from slipping forward on harder cuts.

Texas Context: Carrying an Assisted Opening Knife

Texas knife law has opened up over the years, and that’s good news whether you carry an automatic knife, a switchblade, an OTF knife, or an assisted opener like this one. Within state law, the big distinctions now mainly revolve around blade length and location, not just the mechanism. This assisted opening pocket knife, with its sub-4-inch blade and folding design, fits easily into what most Texas buyers consider everyday carry territory.

Out on the lease, at work, or running into town, a spring-assisted flipper is a practical choice. It’s quick one-handed, but it doesn’t draw the same instant assumptions as a big OTF knife or an aggressive side-opening automatic. For a Texan who already owns a few switchblades or out-the-front blades for the safe, this piece makes sense as the one that actually leaves the house every day.

Collector Value: Why This Assisted Opening Pocket Knife Belongs in a Texas Drawer

Collectors in Texas usually don’t stop at one mechanism. They’ll have an automatic knife or two, maybe an OTF knife with a double-action switch, and a couple of old-school switchblades or lockbacks. This assisted opening pocket knife earns its place by bringing a different story: anime-inspired styling on a straightforward, dependable assisted mechanism.

The Japanese tanto profile is less common than the usual drop point you see on most assisted folders. The emerald accent along the spine and edge line visually ties the blade and handle together, making it stand out in a tray full of black and gray. The script-like markings give it that “ancient glyph” look without getting in the way of sharpening or use.

How It Sits Next to Automatics and OTFs

On the collector shelf, this piece tells a different part of the modern knife story. Your automatic knife represents pure button-driven deployment. Your OTF knife shows off track-and-carriage engineering. This assisted opening knife shows where speed and manual control meet: you start it, the spring finishes it, and the liner lock holds it steady. For a Texas collector who wants a full spread of mechanisms, leaving out assisted opening would feel like skipping a chapter.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Pocket Knives

How does this assisted opening knife differ from an automatic knife or OTF switchblade?

With this assisted opening pocket knife, you have to start the motion yourself using the flipper tab. Once you break the detent, the spring takes over and snaps the blade open. An automatic knife or classic switchblade opens from a button or release with no directional push on the blade. An OTF knife goes a step further and drives the blade straight out the front of the handle on a track. This knife stays in the assisted category: side-opening, flipper-driven, and spring-finished, not a button-fired automatic and not an OTF switchblade.

Is carrying an assisted opening pocket knife like this legal in Texas?

Texas law no longer bans switchblades or automatic knives the way it once did, and that includes assisted opening designs like this one. The real questions now are blade length and where you’re carrying. This assisted pocket knife has a blade in the everyday range, and for most adult Texans, day-to-day carry is generally allowed. That said, some places can have their own rules, and laws can change, so a serious collector or carrier should always confirm current Texas statutes and any local restrictions before clipping anything in their pocket.

Why would a Texas collector pick this over another assisted pocket knife?

Because it doesn’t try to be generic. Mechanically it’s a clean, honest assisted opening pocket knife with a flipper and liner lock—straightforward to use and maintain. Visually, it gives you that anime-inspired relic look: emerald highlights, glyph-like script, and a Japanese tanto blade you don’t see on every gas-station folder. If you already own automatics and OTF knives, this piece rounds out the modern side-opening category with something that actually looks different when you open the drawer.

In the end, this assisted opening pocket knife is for the Texan who knows exactly what they’re buying: not an automatic, not an OTF, not a tourist trinket, but a fast, flipper-driven EDC with a little myth in its bones. It slips into a jeans pocket without fuss, sits comfortably alongside your switchblades and out-the-front knives, and proves you don’t have to confuse the terms to enjoy all three. That’s the kind of clarity a Texas collector can stand behind.