Skip to Content
NinjaQuartet Balanced-Five Throwing Stars - Silver

Price:

22.99


Prismatic NinjaQuartet Precision Throwing Stars - Rainbow Steel
Prismatic NinjaQuartet Precision Throwing Stars - Rainbow Steel
22.99 22.99
Stealth Slide Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Midnight Black
Stealth Slide Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Midnight Black
15.99 15.99

NinjaArc Precision Throwing Star Quartet - Brushed Silver

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5421/image_1920?unique=cd53ca3

5 sold in last 24 hours

This throwing star set is built for Texans who care about clean lines and tight groups. The NinjaArc Precision Throwing Star Quartet delivers four matched five-point stainless steel shuriken, each 4 inches across and just 2 ounces. Brushed silver, balanced around a center control hole, they fly true and hit with repeatable accuracy. On the backyard range, at a Texas ranch, or in a training gym, this quartet turns practice into a smooth, controlled rhythm that collectors and throwers both appreciate.

22.99 22.99 USD 22.99

TS9111SL

Not Available For Sale

3 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

You May Also Like These

NinjaArc Precision Throwing Star Quartet - Brushed Silver

Some tools are for show. This throwing star set is for the Texan who actually steps up to the target. The NinjaArc Precision Throwing Star Quartet gives you four matched, five-point stainless steel stars, each cut clean, balanced around a center control hole, and finished in brushed silver that looks right at home under bright range lights. This isn’t an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade—it’s a dedicated throwing star set built for rhythm, repetition, and honest practice.

What This Throwing Star Set Really Is

Each piece in this quartet is a classic ninja-style throwing star: five symmetrical points, sharpened tips, and a flat profile that stays predictable in flight. At 4 inches across and about 2 ounces each, these throwing stars sit in the sweet spot for consistent, repeatable throws—light enough for long sessions, heavy enough to bite clean into softer wood targets.

There’s no folding mechanism, no automatic knife spring, and no OTF knife track here—just solid stainless steel cut to a consistent pattern. That simplicity is the point. Where a switchblade or an automatic knife is about fast deployment, a throwing star is about what happens after you let go: the arc, the spin, and the way it lands.

Balanced Five-Point Geometry and Center Control

Why Balance Matters on the Texas Range

Serious Texas collectors and throwers know balance isn’t a marketing word—it’s the difference between guesswork and muscle memory. These five-point throwing stars carry their weight evenly across each arm and through the round center hole, so once you find your grip and distance, the pattern becomes repeatable. That lets you move from warm-up tosses to confident, committed throws without changing your rhythm.

The curved cutouts between each point trim unnecessary weight while keeping the throwing star flat and predictable. Whether you pinch the edge or hook a finger through the center hole, you’re working with the same geometry every time. That’s what range discipline feels like when the design is right.

Stainless Steel Construction for Real Use

Each throwing star is cut from stainless steel, giving you durability that stands up to Texas weather and backyard targets. The brushed silver finish keeps reflections controlled and highlights the clean lines of the five-point pattern. This isn’t a fragile display prop; it’s range gear meant to be thrown, recovered, and thrown again.

How These Throwing Stars Fit a Texas Lifestyle

In Texas, gear tends to earn its place. These throwing stars tuck quietly into the included nylon case, ride in a range bag or truck box, and come out when you’ve got time, space, and a safe backstop. They’re not a pocket automatic or OTF knife you carry for everyday tasks, and they’re not a switchblade you’d drop into a jeans pocket. They’re a dedicated training and recreation tool for target sessions on private land or controlled practice spaces.

Where an automatic knife or OTF knife is about one-hand deployment and cutting jobs, this set is about skill building. Your stance, your grip, your distance from the target—everything you do is visible on the board in the tightness of your groups. Texans who appreciate that kind of honest feedback tend to keep a set like this close by.

Case, Storage, and Range Readiness

The included nylon case keeps the four silver throwing stars separated, protecting points and edges from knocking together in transit. Slide it into a duffel next to your other range tools or stow it in a larger gear case. When you set up on a Texas ranch or backlot range, you can unzip, lay them out, and step right into your throw sequence without hunting loose pieces.

Texas Context: Throwing Stars vs. Knives and the Law

Texas law has loosened over the years on many traditional "prohibited weapons," including certain blades and throwing items, but practical responsibility still matters. A throwing star isn’t treated like an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade when it comes to everyday carry—it’s not something you pocket for a run into town. It’s gear you bring out with intention, in the right place, with a safe target and backstop, away from bystanders and property you care about.

For collectors, that difference matters. An automatic knife or switchblade is about how you carry and deploy. A throwing star set like this is about where and how you practice. Texans who know their blades also know that these tools belong on private land, training ranges, or controlled environments where everyone understands what’s in use and why.

Collector Appeal: A Matched Quartet Worth Keeping

Collectors in Texas tend to keep two kinds of pieces: the ones that look good behind glass, and the ones that come off the shelf on a Saturday afternoon. This NinjaArc Precision Throwing Star Quartet can do both. The four matched brushed silver stars make a clean, modern display, but they’re built well enough that it’s hard not to throw them.

The strength of this set is consistency. All four stars share the same geometry, weight, and finish, which means your practice isn’t distorted by mismatched shapes or random balance. When you dial in your distance with one, you’ve dialed it in with all of them. That makes this set a smart choice for a collector who values function over flash.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Stars

Are throwing stars like an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No—throwing stars are a different tool entirely. An automatic knife or switchblade is a folding knife that opens by spring at the push of a button or similar mechanism. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle along a track. A throwing star doesn’t open at all; it’s a fixed, flat piece of steel designed to be thrown, not carried and deployed like a pocket knife. If you’re comparing them, think of a throwing star as range equipment, not an everyday cutting tool.

Are throwing stars legal to own and use in Texas?

Texas has modernized many of its blade laws, and ownership of items like throwing stars has generally become less restricted than it once was. That said, you’re still responsible for how and where you use them. Treat these like any other potentially dangerous tool: keep them on private property or designated training spaces, use proper backstops, and keep them out of places where an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade would raise eyebrows—schools, certain public buildings, and posted locations. When in doubt, it’s worth checking the most current Texas statutes or talking to local authorities.

Is this set more for display or serious practice?

This quartet can handle both. The brushed silver finish and clean five-point layout look sharp in a collector’s case, but the real value shows up on the range. Matching 4-inch diameter, consistent 2-ounce weight, and centered control holes make these throwing stars reliable training tools. If your collection already covers automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades, this set adds a different kind of skill piece—one that measures you by your grouping, not your deployment speed.

For the Texas buyer who knows the difference between a pocket switchblade and a purpose-built throwing star, this NinjaArc quartet feels right. It’s honest steel, balanced for practice, with just enough style to sit proudly in a collection. When you reach for it, you’re not playing around with definitions—you’re stepping out to the target, throwing on purpose, and letting clean design do its work.