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Shadow Constellation Four-Profile Throwing Star Set - Black

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11.99


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Midnight Constellation Tactical Throwing Star Set - Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5488/image_1920?unique=0cde0ef

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This throwing star set brings four distinct profiles into one compact blackout constellation. Each 2.5-inch star is cut for clean rotation, with a center hub and sharpened perimeter that reward proper grip and release. The matte black finish keeps reflections low and the look all business, whether you’re training in the backyard, building out a Texas-themed display, or stocking retail shelves for martial arts customers who know a well-balanced shuriken when they feel one.

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RC1084B

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What This Throwing Star Set Really Is

The Midnight Constellation Tactical Throwing Star Set - Black is exactly what it looks like: a compact, four-piece shuriken-style throwing star set built for practice, display, and resale. Each throwing star runs about 2.5 inches across, cut from flat steel with a center hole and sharpened perimeter, finished in a clean matte black that leans more tactical than theatrical. No hinges, no springs, no automatic knife tricks here — just pure throwing steel for folks who enjoy putting steel on target.

On a site that talks a lot about automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades, this set plays a different role. These are not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade in any sense. They’re throwing stars — closer to a small projectile than any folding blade. That clear line matters in Texas, both for collectors and for the law.

Throwing Stars vs. Automatic Knives in a Texas Collection

Texas collectors usually start with a good automatic knife or maybe a side-opening switchblade, then work their way into OTF knives and other mechanisms. Throwing stars like this Midnight Constellation set fill another lane entirely: they’re about rotation, distance, and impact instead of deployment speed in the hand.

An automatic knife or OTF knife lives in your pocket, ready for one-handed opening. A switchblade gives you that classic side-opening snap. This throwing star set lives in a pouch or display case, comes out when you’re working on your throw or talking shop with other collectors. The pleasure here isn’t in a button press; it’s in the calm, repeatable motion of a well-thrown star and the solid bite when it lands right.

Mechanism: Pure Static Steel, No Moving Parts

Each throwing star in this set is a fixed, non-folding piece of steel. The center hole lets you tune your grip and release, and the balanced profiles support stable rotation when you send them downrange. No springs, no assisted openers, no sliding tracks like you’d see in an OTF knife. That simplicity is part of the appeal — less to break, more to learn.

Profiles That Change the Throw

This set gives you four distinct silhouettes:

  • A six-point star with long, dagger-like spikes for aggressive penetration.
  • A six-point tapered profile that’s a touch more forgiving for beginners.
  • A four-arm design with broad arms and concave cutouts that favor stability.
  • A five-point star with slender spikes for a quicker, more agile feel.

For a Texas buyer who already owns a few automatic knives or a favorite switchblade, these profiles offer a different kind of learning curve — same steel, different skill.

Texas Context: Where Throwing Stars Fit Alongside Your Knives

In Texas, talk about any blade long enough and the conversation will drift to carry law. Automatic knife, OTF knife, switchblade — those categories matter when you put something in your pocket and walk out the door. Throwing stars sit in a separate conversation. They’re not a pocket tool, and they’re not an everyday carry piece like a side-opening automatic knife.

Practically speaking, this throwing star set belongs on private property — backyards, ranch land, training spaces, and collections. Where a switchblade or OTF knife gets judged on how you draw and deploy it, these get judged on how they fly and how they group on the board. You’re not pulling a throwing star to cut rope; you’re stepping back, breathing, and working your fundamentals.

Texas Buyer Reality: Use, Don’t Confuse

Because so many sites blur terms like automatic knife, OTF knife, and switchblade, it’s worth saying this straight: this Midnight Constellation set doesn’t trigger those definitions. There’s no button-activated blade, no sliding track, no assisted opener. That doesn’t make them toys — just puts them in a different lane from your everyday carry automatic knife or any switchblade you might legally keep in your collection.

Why Collectors Make Room for a Throwing Star Set

Serious Texas knife collectors don’t limit themselves to one mechanism. They might have an OTF knife with a hard, double-action snap, a classic Italian-style switchblade for the history, and a modern automatic knife for daily use. A tight, coordinated throwing star set like this adds another dimension to the collection: motion.

Instead of opening and closing, you’re working spin and distance. The matte black finish and matching center hubs make these four pieces look like a planned constellation, not a random pile of shuriken. Lined up in a case beside your automatics, they read as a coherent set with a clear visual theme.

Display Value: Blackout and Balanced

The matte black finish does more than look tactical. Under light, it keeps reflections low so the outlines of each blade shape stand out. That contrast is what makes this set display well on a shelf or board — the edges catch just enough highlight to define the profile without turning shiny or gaudy.

For retail in Texas, that matters. A customer standing at the counter can see four different throwing star shapes at a glance, all in the same blackout treatment, which tells a cleaner story than a mixed, multi-color pack.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Stars

Are throwing stars like this treated the same as an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No. Mechanically and practically, this throwing star set is a different animal. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring or mechanism to deploy a blade into a locked, usable position in your hand. An OTF knife rides a track, sliding the blade out the front. These throwing stars have no moving parts, no buttons, no assisted opening — they’re static projectiles you throw. When Texans ask about the difference, it usually comes down to this: knives are for cutting in the hand, throwing stars are for sticking a target at distance.

Can I own and practice with throwing stars like this in Texas?

Texas has eased up over the years on many blade restrictions, especially around automatic knives and switchblades, but local rules and specific use cases still matter. Ownership and collection are one thing; public carry, transport, and where you throw them is another. The smart Texas buyer treats this throwing star set as gear for private land, controlled training environments, and display — not something to toss in a pocket like an OTF knife or walk into town with. When in doubt, check current state law and any local ordinances before you start throwing.

How does this set earn a place next to my automatics?

Think of this Midnight Constellation set as the motion line in your collection. Your automatic knife shows off deployment, your OTF knife shows off mechanism, your switchblade brings history and style. These throwing stars show skill, repetition, and control over distance. The matched size, center holes, and blackout finish make them feel like a single, intentional set instead of four random pieces. For a Texas collector, that intention is what makes a piece worth keeping.

Closing: For Texans Who Know What They’re Looking At

The Midnight Constellation Tactical Throwing Star Set - Black isn’t here to pretend it’s an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or some kind of switchblade. It’s a straight-shooting set of four compact throwing stars cut for rotation, finished in blackout steel, and sized right for real use in Texas backyards and private ranges.

If you’re the kind of buyer who already knows the difference between a button-fired switchblade and a double-action OTF, you’ll recognize what this set is — and what it isn’t — the moment you pick it up. That clarity is the whole point. You get four focused tools, a clean visual story, and one more way to put steel exactly where you want it, right here in Texas.