Skip to Content
Cosmic Edge Balanced Throwing Star - Blue Accents

Price:

6.99


Tricolor Pride Fast-Deploy OTF Knife - Mexico Flag ABS
Tricolor Pride Fast-Deploy OTF Knife - Mexico Flag ABS
17.99 17.99
Shadow Sigil Precision Throwing Star - Midnight Black
Shadow Sigil Precision Throwing Star - Midnight Black
6.99 6.99

Nebula Strike Precision Throwing Star - Black and Blue

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5411/image_1920?unique=71120a0

15 sold in last 24 hours

This six-point throwing star is built for clean flight and honest practice. The balanced design and weight-cutout pattern keep rotation true, while the blue-edged tips stand out against the matte black body so you can read every throw. Traditional-style engravings nod to classic shuriken without turning it into costume gear. At 4 inches across with a nylon pouch for safe carry, it’s a solid choice for Texas throwers who care more about consistency than flash—but still appreciate a good-looking star.

6.99 6.99 USD 6.99

TS16BL

Not Available For Sale

3 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

You May Also Like These

Balanced Throwing Star Built for Real Practice

The Nebula Strike Precision Throwing Star is exactly what it looks like: a six-point throwing star shaped for clean rotation, not just wall art. At 4 inches across with thoughtfully placed cutouts, it’s tuned for stable flight and repeatable throws, whether you’re running a backyard range in Texas or adding a modern shuriken to a focused collection.

This isn’t an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade trying to borrow ninja styling. It’s a purpose-built throwing star for practice and display, and it earns its spot by flying straight and looking sharp without pretending to be anything else.

What Sets This Throwing Star Apart

Most folks see a throwing star and just think “ninja.” A Texas collector looks closer. Here, the six-point geometry, the weight-reducing holes, and the center opening are all doing real work. They help keep the star balanced around its axis so your release, rotation, and impact stay consistent once you get your throw dialed in.

The matte black finish cuts glare when you’re throwing outdoors, and the blue accent tips give your eye something to track. That color contrast seems small, but it makes a difference when you’re watching rotation against a light target or dusty Texas backdrop.

Six-Point Symmetry for Predictable Rotation

With six evenly spaced points, this throwing star gives you more forgiving grip options without throwing off the balance. However you index it in your fingers, you’re working with the same weight distribution and edge geometry. That’s what you want when you’re building muscle memory—no surprises from one throw to the next.

Engraved Symbols with Modern Lines

The engraved symbols around the center nod to traditional shuriken without turning the piece into a toy. The faces stay clean and modern, which suits collectors who like a hint of history without fake "ancient" styling. On the wall or in the hand, it reads as a contemporary take on a classic form.

Throwing Star vs. Automatic Knife, OTF Knife, and Switchblade

On a site that talks about automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades, this throwing star plays a different role entirely. A switchblade or side-opening automatic knife is about one-hand deployment from a folded or closed position. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out of the handle through a front opening. All three live in your pocket, open with a mechanism, and ride on springs or slides.

A throwing star like this one doesn’t deploy at all—it’s already "open." There’s no button, no spring, no OTF track, and no switchblade mechanism. It’s a flat, balanced projectile meant for throwing practice and display. For Texas buyers who already know their way around automatic knives, that clarity matters: this fills a different slot in the gear drawer.

Texas Context: Carrying and Using a Throwing Star

Texas has loosened up many of its blade laws over the years, but a throwing star still deserves a little common sense. Unlike an automatic knife or OTF knife that lives clipped in your pocket for everyday carry, this throwing star is better treated as range gear or part of a home collection. It ships with a nylon pouch for safe storage and transport, which is exactly how most responsible Texas buyers will use it—on private property, on a controlled throwing range, or on display.

If you’re used to tracking what’s legal for a switchblade in Texas, treat this star the same way you treat any tool that’s clearly built for throwing: respect local rules, don’t bring it where it doesn’t belong, and keep it secured when it’s not in use. It’s a piece of throwing equipment first, a conversation piece second.

Range-Friendly Size and Carry

At roughly 4 inches in diameter, this throwing star hits a sweet spot: big enough to feel in the hand, small enough to carry discreetly in the included pouch with your other range gear. That size pairs well with typical backyard or property-line targets Texas owners set up—plywood, dedicated throwing boards, or layered foam.

Why Texas Collectors Add a Star to a Knife Case

Plenty of Texas knife folks eventually branch out from automatic knives and OTF knives into side pieces that show off different skills. A balanced throwing star like this one doesn’t compete with your switchblades; it rounds out the collection. It sits nicely in a display tray beside your automatics and gives you a different discipline to work on when you step outside.

Design Details That Matter to Collectors

Collectors notice the small decisions. The blue-edged tips aren’t just for flash. Against the matte black body, they give a visual edge that defines each point cleanly. On the throw, you can see that blue arc as the star spins, which helps you read whether your release is flat or wobbling.

The circular cutouts serve double duty: they control weight and give extra visual texture without weakening the structure. The central hole and six surrounding cutouts keep mass centered, which is what you want in a throwing tool that stays predictable across dozens of throws in a row.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Stars

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

An automatic knife, including a switchblade, uses a spring and button or lever to snap a folding blade into the open position from the side. An OTF knife drives a blade straight out the front of the handle along a track. Both are about quick, one-hand access to a cutting edge. A throwing star is already open and flat, with no mechanism at all. It’s not an automatic, not an OTF, and not a switchblade—it’s a dedicated throwing tool designed to fly, stick, and display.

Are throwing stars legal to own and use in Texas?

Texas law has evolved to be more blade-friendly, but it still expects owners to use common sense. In general, owning a throwing star on private property as a collector’s item or for practice on a proper target is very different from carrying it into restricted places. Just as you’d check local rules before carrying an automatic knife or switchblade into a school or courthouse, you should treat a throwing star the same way: respect posted policies, keep it in its pouch with your gear, and use it where it belongs—on a safe range or at home.

Is this throwing star better suited for practice or display?

This design is honest enough to do both. The balanced six-point layout, weight cutouts, and readable blue tips make it a solid practice star when you’re learning consistent throws. At the same time, the matte black finish and engraved symbols give it enough visual presence to sit comfortably in a Texas collector’s display beside more serious automatic knives and OTF knives. If you like your gear to earn its place, this one can pull double duty.

For the Texas buyer who already knows the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, this throwing star scratches a different itch. It’s a clean, balanced piece of gear with a modern ninja look and just enough traditional shuriken flavor to feel grounded. It won’t ride in your pocket or flip open on a button press—but when you step out back, hang a target, and send it spinning, it tells its own story just fine.