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Viper Empress Anime Assisted Opening Pocket Knife - Black Graphic Steel

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Serpent Empress Anime Skull Assisted Opening Knife - Black Graphic Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5934/image_1920?unique=32f66fb

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This assisted opening pocket knife brings anime attitude to real-world use. The Serpent Empress rides across a graphic steel handle, backed by a matching skull-print black blade that snaps out fast with a spring-assisted flipper and locks solid with a liner lock. At 8 inches open, it’s the right size for everyday pocket carry in Texas, riding low on a steel clip until it’s time to show it off. For collectors who know their mechanisms, it’s a quick-deploy assisted opener with serious visual bite.

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Graphic
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Graphic
Handle Material Steel
Theme Boa Hancock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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Serpent Empress Anime Skull Assisted Opening Knife - Black Graphic Steel

The Serpent Empress is a spring-assisted opening pocket knife built for folks who know the difference between an assisted opener, an automatic knife, and a switchblade—and care enough to get it right. This is a liner-lock folding knife with a spring-assisted flipper tab, not an OTF knife and not a push-button automatic. You start the motion with your finger, the internal spring finishes it, and the 3.5-inch black graphic steel blade is ready to work or show off in a heartbeat.

What This Assisted Opening Knife Really Is

Mechanically, this is a side-opening, spring-assisted pocket knife. That means you’ve got a standard folding knife layout with a pivot, liners, and a liner lock, plus a coiled or torsion spring that helps propel the blade open once you give it a nudge with the flipper. It is not a switchblade in the classic automatic sense—there’s no button firing the blade—and it’s definitely not an OTF knife where the blade comes straight out the front of the handle.

Collectors who already own an automatic knife or a true switchblade will recognize the difference right away. The Serpent Empress gives you quick, one-handed deployment, but keeps that assisted opening character: you stay in control from first touch to full lock-up. The clip point, plain-edge blade in black graphic steel carries the skull motif right out onto the edge, while the steel handle holds the anime-style empress and roaring skull art that gives this assisted opening knife its name.

Mechanism: Spring-Assisted, Liner Lock Confidence

The flipper tab is your entry point. Press it, roll your finger, and the spring takes over. Once open, a steel liner snaps behind the tang of the blade, giving you a familiar liner lock that’s easy to close with one hand. No sliders like an OTF knife, no firing button like an automatic or switchblade—just clean, predictable assisted opening action.

Size and Carry: Pocket-Ready, Display-Worthy

Open length sits at 8 inches, with a 4.5-inch closed profile. That puts this assisted opener squarely in the everyday carry pocket-knife zone, not a huge field blade and not a tiny novelty. The single-position pocket clip keeps it riding ready in a jeans pocket, backpack, or truck console, while the bold anime and skull artwork makes it just as at home on a display stand in a Texas knife collection.

Anime Skull Art Meets Texas Collector Reality

Plenty of knives wear skulls and flames. What gives this assisted opening knife a leg up with Texas collectors is how the art and mechanism line up. The anime-inspired empress on the handle, paired with the roaring skull and matching skull graphic on the blade, gives it a themed, fantasy-anime look that actually holds together as a piece. It’s not random decal work slapped on a generic switchblade; it’s a consistent design built onto a practical assisted opening EDC frame.

For a Texas buyer who already owns a few automatic knives or maybe an OTF knife, this one fills a different role. It’s the graphic-heavy assisted opener you toss in the pocket for a convention weekend, a late-night show in Austin, or a meetup with other collectors. It opens fast, looks wild, and still gives you the utility of a plain-edge clip point blade you can actually cut with.

Blade and Steel Story

The black graphic steel blade carries the same aggressive skull motif you see on the handle, but beneath the artwork it’s a straightforward, easy-to-maintain steel suited for light everyday cutting, package duty, and the usual pocket-knife chores. The plain edge sharpens up quickly, and the clip point profile gives you a precise tip for detail work, while the jimping on the spine offers thumb traction when you choke up on the blade.

Handle, Grip, and Pocket Clip

The steel handle serves as a canvas for the empress and skull artwork, but it’s also a solid, predictable frame for the mechanism. The liner lock nestles inside, the flipper tab sits proud enough to find without looking, and the pocket clip keeps the knife where you left it. No gimmick shapes here—just a familiar assisted opening handle that happens to be wearing loud anime skull art instead of plain scales.

Texas Law, Carry, and Where This Knife Fits

Texas knife law is friendlier than most, but it still helps to understand where an assisted opening knife like this sits compared to an automatic knife, a switchblade, or an OTF knife. In Texas, the big dividing line these days is blade length, not whether the knife is automatic or assisted. This Serpent Empress assisted opener runs about 3.5 inches of blade—comfortably under the 5.5-inch threshold that matters most in state law for everyday carry.

Because this is a spring-assisted folding knife, not a push-button switchblade and not an OTF automatic knife, it draws less attention in everyday use. You’re opening a pocket knife with a flipper, not firing a front-opening automatic. For a Texas carrier who wants speed in the hand, but doesn’t feel the need to bring an OTF knife to the feed store or the office, this assisted opener hits a comfortable middle ground.

Assisted Opening Knife vs Automatic vs OTF

Texas collectors talk mechanisms the way some folks talk trucks. This Serpent Empress is an assisted opening knife: you move the blade a little, the spring helps finish the job. An automatic knife or traditional switchblade uses a button or hidden release to fire the blade from fully closed to fully open with no extra motion from you. An OTF knife is a different animal entirely—its blade rides in a channel and shoots straight out the front of the handle using a thumb slide or trigger.

That distinction matters in the hand. An OTF knife feels like a tool built for pure deployment speed and showmanship. A switchblade or automatic has that button-click drama. This Serpent Empress assisted opener sits in between: it’s quick, it’s one-handed, but the action still feels like a tuned-up folder. For many Texas buyers, that’s the sweet spot for real-world carry, especially when paired with a graphic design that makes it a natural display piece when it’s off duty.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is this closer to an OTF knife, an automatic, or a regular pocket knife?

This Serpent Empress is mechanically closer to a regular folding pocket knife, just tuned up with a spring. You use the flipper to start the motion, and the assisted opening mechanism kicks the blade into lock-up. An automatic knife or classic switchblade would fire from a button with no real blade start from you, and an OTF knife would drive the blade straight out the front on a track. Here, you’ve got side-opening, spring-assisted action that feels familiar and fast without being a true automatic.

Is this assisted opening knife legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, the key factor is blade length, not whether the knife is assisted opening, automatic, or a switchblade. With a blade around 3.5 inches, this assisted opening pocket knife falls under the 5.5-inch everyday carry line that most Texans rely on. City rules can vary, and it’s always wise to double-check local restrictions, but as a general Texas carry piece, this assisted opener sits in a far more comfortable zone than many people assume when they hear "switchblade" or "OTF knife."

Why would a Texas collector choose this over a plain automatic knife?

A Texas collector reaches for the Serpent Empress when they want personality and control as much as raw mechanism. You get quick, assisted deployment that’s fun to run, a reliable liner lock, and loud anime skull artwork that stands out in a drawer full of black-handled autos and OTF knives. It’s a conversation piece that still cuts, and it fills that niche between serious tactical automatic and simple utility folder—especially for fans of anime, fantasy themes, and graphic-driven designs.

Why This Assisted Opening Knife Belongs in a Texas Collection

Texas collectors build stories one blade at a time. Some knives earn their place through pedigree—high-end automatics, battle-proven OTF knives, old-school switchblades. Others make the cut because they capture a moment or a style. The Serpent Empress Anime Skull Assisted Opening Knife sits squarely in that second camp: it’s a fast-deploy assisted opener with enough graphic attitude to mark a chapter in a collection, without pretending to be something it’s not.

If you’re the kind of Texan who can explain the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and an assisted opener without breaking stride, this piece makes sense. You’re not buying it to replace your go-to work blade. You’re buying it because sometimes the right knife is the one that opens quick, looks like it just walked off an anime panel, and still feels like a solid, honest pocket knife in the hand. That’s the Serpent Empress—and it knows exactly what it is.