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Grimleaf Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Green Skull

Price:

7.99


Stars & Stripes Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Knife - USA Aluminum
Stars & Stripes Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Knife - USA Aluminum
10.99 10.99
Skullleaf Rapid Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Black Blade
Skullleaf Rapid Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Black Blade
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Grimleaf Neon Skull Assisted Opening Knife - Green Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2101/image_1920?unique=a0c1fbe

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This Grimleaf assisted opening knife snaps to attention with a quick spring-assisted flick, not a switchblade jump or OTF slide. The matte black clip point blade pairs with a neon green skull-and-leaf handle that glows against the dark. In a Texas pocket, it rides low on the clip, ready for everyday cutting without shouting “tactical.” For collectors, it’s the right mix of fast deployment, liner lock security, and bold skull art that stands out from the usual black-on-black folders.

7.99 7.99 USD 7.99

A44GN

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Theme Skull
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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Grimleaf Neon Skull Assisted Opening Knife – What It Actually Is

The Grimleaf Neon Skull Assisted Opening Knife is a spring-assisted folding knife, not an automatic switchblade and not an OTF knife. You start the blade with the flipper tab or thumb stud, the internal spring finishes the job, and a liner lock holds the matte black clip point in place. That simple difference in how it deploys is what keeps it in the assisted opening lane and out of the full automatic knife category.

Collectors who care about the line between an assisted opener, a switchblade, and an OTF knife will see it right away. The blade pivots from the side like a standard folder, there’s no button-fired automatic mechanism, and nothing slides straight out the front. You’re getting fast, one-handed deployment without crossing into full switchblade territory.

How This Assisted Opening Knife Works in the Hand

This knife is built around a spring-assisted mechanism. You nudge the flipper tab or thumb stud, the spring takes over, and the blade snaps into lockup with a crisp, predictable feel. That’s the assisted opening story: manual start, mechanical finish. It isn’t an OTF knife that tracks on internal rails, and it isn’t a button-driven automatic knife that jumps open the moment you hit a release.

The clip point blade gives you a fine tip for detail work while keeping enough belly for everyday cutting. The matte black finish keeps reflections low and lets the neon green skull graphics along the handle do the talking instead. A liner lock secures the blade, and once it’s open, it feels like a straightforward working folder—just one that got there faster than a plain manual knife.

Grip, Skull Theme, and Everyday Control

The Grimleaf handle is contoured with finger grooves so that the skull-and-leaf artwork doesn’t cost you real-world control. Texturing and shape matter here: even under that loud neon green pattern, you’ve got a handle that settles into the hand instead of skating around. The lanyard hole at the butt gives you another way to secure it with cord if you like your knives tethered.

Skull themes can veer into toy territory. This one doesn’t. The big green skull at the pivot is the focal point, but the dark backdrop, matte finishes, and clean blade profile keep it on the right side of collectible EDC instead of novelty.

Side-Opening Speed vs. OTF and Switchblade Action

Compared to an OTF knife, this Grimleaf keeps things simpler: side-opening, pivot-based, no internal sliding tracks to clean out. Against a true automatic switchblade, it trades push-button drama for a more controlled start—you decide when to move the flipper, and the spring helps you finish. That difference is the reason some Texas buyers lean toward assisted opening knives for everyday carry while keeping their automatics and OTF switchblades in the collection or at home.

Texas Carry Reality for an Assisted Opening Knife

Texas law has opened up a lot over the years, and automatic knives, switchblades, and OTF knives are far less restricted than they used to be. Even so, many Texas buyers still prefer the middle ground of an assisted opening knife for daily pocket time. It works like a regular folding knife with a boost, not a full-on automatic knife that fires from a button or switch.

The Grimleaf Neon Skull rides low on its black pocket clip, disappearing against jeans or work pants until you need it. In a Texas glovebox, backpack, or daily pocket, it’s the knife you reach for to cut rope, open feed bags, slice tape, or break down cardboard. The loud part is the handle art, not the legal status.

Why Texas Collectors Make Room for This Assisted Opener

Every serious Texas collector already has at least one OTF knife, a couple of automatic knives, and a switchblade or two that only come out for the right conversations. This Grimleaf assisted opening knife fills a different spot: the fast, affordable, skull-themed EDC that actually gets carried, used, and shown off.

For the price bracket it lives in, the build story is straightforward: spring-assisted side opener, liner lock, plain edge clip point blade, and a theme that grabs attention the second someone sees that green skull. In a display case, it reads as an impulse grab. In a drawer full of plain black folders, it stands out as the one that doesn’t blend into the pile.

Mechanism for the Collector Who Sorts by Type

If you sort your collection by mechanism, this one belongs squarely in the assisted opening knife section. It is not an OTF knife, not a traditional Italian-style switchblade, and not a button-fired automatic knife. It’s a spring-assisted folder with side-opening deployment, a flipper, and a thumb stud. That clarity matters when you’re explaining your collection to another collector who actually pays attention to how blades move.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is this knife an automatic, an OTF, or a switchblade?

This Grimleaf is an assisted opening knife—a spring-assisted folder. You start the open with the flipper tab or thumb stud, and the internal spring completes it. An automatic knife or switchblade usually opens by pressing a button or switch, with the blade snapping out under spring power from a closed, at-rest position. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on internal tracks, either by spring or manual slide. Here, you’ve got a side-opening assisted knife with no button and no front-opening mechanism.

How does Texas law treat an assisted opening knife like this?

Texas law no longer singles out switchblades and most automatic knives the way it used to, and assisted opening knives like this Grimleaf have been widely carried across the state for years. The key is that this is a side-opening folder you start manually, not a button-fired automatic or OTF knife. As always, Texas buyers should check current state statutes and any local rules, but in practice, assisted opening knives are a common, accepted everyday carry choice from Amarillo to the Valley.

Why would a Texas collector pick this over a full automatic or OTF?

A lot of Texas collectors like to separate their "show" knives from their "go" knives. The OTF knife and high-end automatic switchblade might be the conversation pieces; the assisted opening knife is what they actually clip into a pocket. This Grimleaf gives you quick deployment and real cutting utility without the extra mechanical complexity of an OTF or the push-button intensity of a true automatic knife. Add the neon green skull art, and you’ve got a piece that carries easy but still gets a second look when you lay it on the table.

Texas Identity in a Neon Skull Package

The Grimleaf Neon Skull Assisted Opening Knife fits right into a Texas rotation where you’ve already got your automatics and OTF knives spoken for. It’s the side-opening assisted folder that doesn’t pretend to be anything else: fast when you need it, secure when it’s locked, and loud enough on the handle that you’ll remember which pocket knife you grabbed.

For a Texas buyer who knows the difference between an assisted opening knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, that honesty matters. You’re not buying a label; you’re buying a mechanism and a look. This one gives you both—a clean spring-assisted action and a neon skull motif that marks it as yours the second it hits the light.