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Battle-Line Mercenary Longsword - Wood Handle

Price:

60.99


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Frontline Duty Mercenary Sword - Brown Wood

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/8618/image_1920?unique=9b1dfe1

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This mercenary sword is a straight-talking, 50" medieval-style blade built for folks who like their steel practical, not gaudy. The long, single-edge blade with a full-length blood groove, simple crossguard, and smooth wood handle make it feel like it came off a soldier’s belt, not a movie set. The fitted sheath keeps that reach under control when you’re hauling it to the lease, the range, or the next Texas ren fair.

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SW901018

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What a Mercenary Sword Really Is

This 50" mercenary sword is built in the spirit of the working medieval blade – the kind a soldier-for-hire would actually carry, not the jeweled showpiece hanging over the lord’s fireplace. Long, straight, and honest, it’s a practical sword meant to look and feel like real field gear.

At about 50 inches overall, with a single-edged blade and a full-length blood groove running the spine, this isn’t a fantasy toy. It’s a medieval-style mercenary sword with a simple crossguard, a smooth brown wood handle, and a plain sheath that does its job without hollering for attention. Texas buyers who collect automatic knives, OTF knives, or the occasional switchblade will recognize the same thing here: mechanism and purpose first, ornament second.

Mercenary Sword Design: Built for Work, Not Ceremony

Where a dress sword chases shine and scrollwork, a mercenary sword chases survival. This one follows that tradition. The straight, narrow blade is made for reliable cuts and thrusts. The blood groove – or fuller – isn’t just for looks. On historical blades, it lightens the steel while keeping the spine strong, giving a soldier a longer sword that still moves quickly.

The crossguard is a simple metal bar with gentle curves, enough to keep your hand from sliding forward without bulking up the profile. The faceted pommel caps the handle with a clean mechanical touch, helping balance the long blade. No dragons, no runes, just hardware that makes sense.

Handle and Grip That Feel Period-Correct

The brown wood handle is smooth, tapered, and straightforward. That wood-and-steel pairing is what most medieval fighters would have wrapped their fingers around. It gives a warm, natural grip that breaks in over time, which collectors and reenactors both appreciate. Compared to the G10, aluminum, and textured synthetics you see on a modern automatic knife or OTF knife, this feels old-world on purpose – and that contrast is exactly why Texas collectors like to keep at least one good sword in the mix.

Balanced for Reach and Control

At 50 inches overall, this mercenary sword has real reach. The slim profile and fuller help keep the weight manageable, so you’re not swinging a crowbar. It’s long enough to look right over armor or a gambeson at a Texas ren fair, but still light enough to practice cuts, forms, or stage work without fighting the steel itself. Think of it as the fixed-blade equivalent of a trusted side-opening automatic – simple, predictable, and ready.

How a Mercenary Sword Fits a Texas Collection

Texas collectors who already know the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade tend to appreciate clear categories. This sword slides into the "historical steel" lane: a medieval-style mercenary sword for display, light training, costume, or reenactment, not an everyday carry piece.

On the wall, it reads as a real weapon from a rough time – a soldier’s tool, not a prince’s prize. On the hip, the included brown sheath gives it a clean, low-profile carry to and from the truck. Next to modern folders, it tells the rest of the story: before springs and buttons, you had reach, leverage, and a good piece of wood and steel.

From OTF Knives to Swords: Same Eye for Mechanism

Collectors who obsess over the action on an OTF knife or the timing on an automatic knife usually bring that same eye to swords. Here, the "mechanism" is simple: a full-length tang buried in that wood, a crossguard to lock your grip, and a blade geometry that balances the length. No switchblade button, no OTF track – just the oldest deployment system on earth: draw and swing.

Texas Law, Transport, and Reality for a Mercenary Sword

Texas law is friendlier to blades than most states. Under current Texas knife law, there’s no general statewide ban on owning a sword like this mercenary sword. For carry, Texas divides blades by length and location, and local rules or posted signs can still matter, especially in schools, certain government buildings, or private venues. In plain English: it’s fine to own, but you treat it like a long gun – transported with respect, not flashed around town.

This isn’t an automatic knife, it’s not an OTF knife, and it’s not a switchblade. It’s a full-length sword, and that alone is enough to draw eyes. In Texas, that means you keep it sheathed, secured in the truck, and bring it out where it belongs: the ranch, the range, the ren fair, or a training hall that welcomes steel. The extra shipping note on this piece just mirrors that reality – a 50" mercenary sword takes a little more care to move than a pocket folder.

Collector Details That Make This Mercenary Sword Worth Owning

For a Texas buyer with a drawer full of automatics and a case full of folders, this medieval-style mercenary sword scratches a different itch. It has the working-man lines of a soldier’s blade rather than the overbuilt fantasy curves, and that alone sets it apart from the usual wall-hanger swords.

  • 50" overall length: Presence on the wall, authority in the hand.
  • Fuller (blood groove): Classic medieval profile, practical steel geometry.
  • Wood handle: Natural grip that ages with use and handling.
  • Simple crossguard and pommel: Functional hardware that reads historically inspired, not theatrical.
  • Fitted sheath included: Makes storage, transport, and costume carry straightforward.

Where your automatic knife or OTF knife gives you instant one-handed action, this mercenary sword gives you historical reach and a different kind of satisfaction – the feel of a full-length blade clearing a sheath the way it’s been done for centuries.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Mercenary Swords

Is a mercenary sword like an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No. A mercenary sword is a full-length, fixed blade – there’s no spring, no button, no track, and no folding joint. An automatic knife uses a spring-loaded mechanism to snap the blade out from the side when you hit a button. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front along internal rails. "Switchblade" is a legal and slang term that usually points back to automatic knives in pocket size. This mercenary sword lives in a different category altogether: draw it from the sheath, and it’s ready.

Is it legal to own and transport this mercenary sword in Texas?

Under current Texas law, owning a sword like this mercenary sword is generally legal statewide. The issues come with where and how you carry it. Many public buildings, schools, events, and private properties can restrict long blades, and anything this size will draw attention if you walk public streets with it. The practical Texas answer: store it safely at home, transport it sheathed in the vehicle, and unsheathe it where swords make sense – ranch land, private property, ranges, reenactments, or training spaces that allow them. For anything beyond that, a quick check of up-to-date Texas statutes or local rules is worth your time.

Why would a knife collector add a mercenary sword to the mix?

Because it rounds out the story. If you already know the difference between a side-opening automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a classic switchblade, this mercenary sword gives you a reference point for where it all started: long steel, simple hardware, and a grip built to survive the campaign, not impress the court. The clean medieval lines fit well beside modern tactical pieces, and the wood and steel contrast all that anodized aluminum and G10 in your case. It’s the kind of sword you can picture on a rough soldier’s belt – which is exactly why it belongs in a serious Texas collection.

Texas Steel, Collector Mindset

The Frontline Duty Mercenary Sword – Brown Wood isn’t trying to be everything at once. It’s a straightforward medieval-style mercenary sword with a 50" reach, a blood-grooved blade, and a plain wood handle that feels right in the hand. Texas collectors who already speak the language of automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades will recognize that same respect for function here, just stretched out to full sword length. If you want one piece of honest historical-style steel to stand beside your modern folders, this is the kind of blade that quietly earns its place.