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Reaper Mark Four-Point Throwing Star Set - Black

Price:

13.99


Reaper Tri-Edge 3-Piece Throwing Star Set - Midnight Black
Reaper Tri-Edge 3-Piece Throwing Star Set - Midnight Black
16.99 16.99
Skullmark Balanced Quad-Point Throwing Star Set - Silver
Skullmark Balanced Quad-Point Throwing Star Set - Silver
13.99 13.99

Midnight Reaper Skull-Marked Throwing Star Trio - Black

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This throwing star set brings three matched, four-point shuriken with skull-marked faces and a low-glare black finish, tuned for controlled practice throws. Each 4-inch star is cut from a single piece for consistent balance, riding quiet and true from hand to target. The fitted sheath keeps the trio riding together in your range bag or glove box. For Texas collectors who already know their automatic knives and switchblades, this is the clean, martial throwing set that rounds out the lineup.

13.99 13.99 USD 13.99

ABS2BK

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Midnight Reaper Throwing Star Set for Texas Collectors

The Midnight Reaper Skull-Marked Throwing Star Trio is not a knife, not a switchblade, and not an OTF knife. It’s a clean, four-point throwing star set built for Texas buyers who already know their automatic knives and just want a balanced shuriken that flies straight. Three matched stars, 4 inches across, low-glare black, skull-marked faces, and a fitted sheath so they ride together instead of rattling loose in a drawer.

What This Throwing Star Set Actually Is

Each piece in this throwing star set is a fixed, one-piece steel shuriken with four pointed tips and unsharpened inner edges. No springs, no automatic action, no OTF mechanism waiting to jump. That matters for Texas collectors who spend their time comparing automatic knives, OTF knives, and side-opening switchblades. This is a different tool: pure throwing steel, tuned for practice and range work rather than pocket carry.

The 4-inch diameter keeps the footprint compact but easy to track in flight, and the equal-length arms mean each throwing star leaves the hand with the same rotation and feel. Once you’ve sighted in your automatic knife collection and dialed your favorite switchblade, this is the kind of set you add for the pleasure of repetition—same weight, same balance, over and over.

Mechanics of a Balanced Throwing Star Set

Single-Piece Construction and Centered Cutout

Where an automatic knife lives or dies by its spring and lock-up, a throwing star lives or dies by balance. These shuriken are cut from single pieces of steel, so there’s no joint, pivot, or assisted opening hardware to shift the weight. The central circular cutout and the smooth inner curves between the arms keep the mass distributed evenly around the center, which is why they feel predictable the second they leave your grip.

For a Texas buyer used to checking blade play on an OTF knife or testing the snap on a switchblade, the test here is simpler: pinch the center, feel the even weight, and watch how consistently the star turns in the air. This set passes that check. The low-glare black finish adds just enough texture for reliable grip without turning the surface into sandpaper that chews up your fingers between throws.

Four-Point Profile for Consistent Sticks

Three-point shuriken can be fun, but a four-point throwing star gives you more chances to stick on imperfect throws. Each arm on this star is leaf-shaped: broad shoulders that taper to a clean point. The tips are ground for impact, but the inner edges remain unsharpened, keeping the focus on penetration at the point instead of slicing.

If you’re the kind of Texas collector who can already tell the difference between a snappy automatic knife and a sluggish one, you’ll notice the same kind of nuance here: each arm hits with similar authority, whether it’s the first or fourth point that finds the target. That consistency is what lets a practice session turn into muscle memory.

Texas Context: Stars, Steel, and State Law

Texas has opened up a lot of room for blade owners in recent years, but knives and throwing stars still live under different expectations than your everyday pocket automatic. While a switchblade or OTF knife is now legal to own and carry in most settings, you always want to check your local ordinances and any restrictions on where you’re throwing. A throwing star set like this Midnight Reaper trio is made for controlled environments—backyard ranges where it’s safe and legal, or private land where you’ve got permission and a proper backstop.

Think of it like this: your automatic knife or side-opening switchblade rides in your pocket around town. This throwing star set rides in the truck, range bag, or gear box until you’re on private Texas dirt with a target board hung solid. That split—carry knife versus range tool—is how a lot of seasoned Texas collectors think about gear.

How This Set Fits Next to Your Automatic Knives

Most Texas buyers finding this site are here for automatic knives, OTF knives, and classic switchblades. This throwing star set earns its place because it scratches a different itch while still talking the same language: steel, balance, and control. Your OTF knife is about speed from pocket to work. Your switchblade is about the snap, the history, and the line it cuts in the air when it opens. This shuriken set is about the arc between your fingers and the target.

The skull-marked faces and black tactical finish land squarely in the same aesthetic you see on modern automatic knives—dark hardware, purposeful engraving, no chrome circus. For a Texas collector with a row of black-coated blades already in the case, these throwing stars continue the story, just in a different format.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Star Sets

How is a throwing star different from an automatic knife or switchblade?

A throwing star is a fixed, multi-point projectile—no moving parts, no spring, no automatic opening. An automatic knife or switchblade is a single-blade knife that uses a spring-driven mechanism to open from the handle, either side-opening or as an OTF knife that comes straight out the front. This Midnight Reaper set is all about consistent throws, not rapid deployment from the pocket, which is why Texas collectors usually think of it alongside their other training tools instead of their EDC automatics.

Are throwing stars legal to own and use in Texas?

Texas law has become much friendlier to blade owners, including automatic knives and switchblades, but throwing stars fall into a category that can still draw attention if you’re careless. Ownership on private property is generally treated differently than public carry or use. The smart move for a Texas buyer is simple: keep this throwing star set as a range tool on private land, check your local city and county rules, and don’t treat it like a pocket knife. When in doubt, confirm the current law before you start throwing.

Is this throwing star set suitable for practice or just display?

This Midnight Reaper trio is made for practice first, display second. The 4-inch size, four-point symmetry, and single-piece build all lean toward repeatable throws and clean rotation. The skull motif and black finish look good on a wall, but the balance is what Texas collectors notice when they step outside and start sticking a target. It’s a practical way to add a different skill to a collection built around automatic knives and OTF blades.

In the end, this throwing star set is for the Texas knife owner who already knows exactly what an automatic knife is and doesn’t confuse a switchblade with an OTF knife. You’re not buying it because you need another edge in your pocket—you’re buying it because there’s satisfaction in sending steel on a true line, under your control, on your own piece of Texas ground. That’s the kind of piece that earns its quiet corner in a serious collection.