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Dragon-Scale Quick-Strike Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black

Price:

13.99


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Shadow Wyrm Quick-Strike Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black

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This spring assisted knife is built for the Texan who likes a little myth in their metal. One-handed flipper deployment snaps the matte black American tanto blade into place, locking up solid on a liner lock. Dragon-scale texturing along the spine and handle gives positive grip when your hands are wet, cold, or gloved. It rides low on a pocket clip, ready for Houston parking lots, Hill Country campfires, and West Texas wind. This is for someone who knows an assisted opener isn’t a switchblade—and prefers it that way.

13.99 13.99 USD 13.99

A134SB

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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
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 440 stainless steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Steel
Theme Dragon
Safety Liner lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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What This Spring Assisted Knife Really Is

This isn’t an automatic knife pretending to be something it’s not. The Shadow Wyrm is a true spring assisted knife: a side-opening folder you start with a flipper tab, and the internal spring finishes clean and fast. It’s not an OTF knife—that blade doesn’t shoot straight out the front—and it’s not a classic switchblade with a button firing the action. It’s the middle ground a lot of Texas buyers actually live in: fast, one-handed, and practical, without crossing into full automatic knife territory.

The matte black American tanto blade rides inside a straight, steel handle carved up with dragon relief and scale detail. It’s built as an everyday carry piece with a little attitude, not a safe queen. If you’ve ever been annoyed at a site that calls every folder a “switchblade,” this one will feel like a breath of honest Texas air.

Spring Assisted Knife Mechanism, Explained Texas-Plain

A spring assisted knife like this works on partnership. You give it a nudge with the flipper, and the spring takes over to drive the blade open. With an automatic knife or switchblade, a button or lever activates the spring and sends the blade out with no wrist or finger start. With an OTF knife, that same concept runs in a track straight out the front of the handle.

Here, the flipper tab and tuned spring are the story. That tab becomes a small guard when open, and the spring is tuned to be brisk without feeling jumpy. The liner lock snaps behind the tang, giving you a secure lockup that folds away with a thumb press when you’re done. It’s the kind of action you can run all day in the truck, at the desk, or by the fire without babying it.

American Tanto Edge for Real Work

The American tanto profile on this spring assisted knife gives you two working zones: a strong, reinforced tip for piercing and a straight primary edge for push cuts and scraping. In a matte black finish over 440 stainless steel, it’s built for utility: breaking down boxes in a Houston warehouse, cutting line on the coast, or trimming cordage at a Hill Country campsite.

Dragon-Scale Grip You Can Feel

The dragon theme isn’t just decoration. The raised dragon and scale pattern along the handle and blade spine give you traction where it matters. Thumb jimping near the pivot lets you choke up for control cuts, and the straight handle profile means it sits flat in the pocket, out of your way until you need it.

How This Spring Assisted Knife Carries in Texas

Texas is friendly to those who carry a blade, but how you carry still matters. This spring assisted knife runs a pocket clip for tip-down, low-profile carry. It disappears into jeans in Austin, work pants in Midland, or cargo shorts at the lake. When you need it, that flipper tab and assisted mechanism give you a clean, one-handed draw and open without any drama.

For a lot of Texans, this kind of assisted opening knife hits the sweet spot. It’s faster and more satisfying than a pure manual folder, but it doesn’t have the same automatic knife stigma some folks still worry about in certain settings. You get quick access, secure lockup, and an everyday companion that looks right at home whether you’re walking a Fort Worth parking garage at night or sitting by a campfire in Big Bend.

Spring Assisted Knife vs Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade

Collectors in Texas pay attention to the details, and knife type is one of them. This spring assisted knife is a side-opening folder with a manual start and spring finish. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a button or lever to fire the blade from a closed position with no assist from your wrist. An OTF knife is a type of automatic where the blade slides straight out—or back into—the handle on a track.

Why does it matter? Because when you say you’re carrying a spring assisted knife, a serious Texas collector knows exactly what mechanism is riding in your pocket. They know it’s not an OTF knife, and not a classic switchblade. They also know that for day-in, day-out EDC, this mechanism can be faster back into action than some flashier automatics because it’s simple, robust, and easy to clean.

Why a Texan Might Choose Assisted Over Full Automatic

In the real world, speed is only part of the story. A lot of Texas buyers like assisted openers because they look and act like regular folders until they’re in motion. No buttons, no levers—just a clean flip and snap. For work environments where an automatic knife might raise eyebrows, this still gives you fast deployment with a lower profile. And if you’ve ever had dust and sand jam up a budget OTF knife, you’ll appreciate the straightforward, hinge-and-spring build on a folder like this.

Texas Law, Everyday Reality, and This Spring Assisted Knife

Under current Texas law, most of the old restrictions on automatic knives and switchblades have been rolled back. Texans can legally own and carry automatic knives, OTF knives, and spring assisted knives, with the main lines being blade length and location-based knife policies. That said, employers, schools, and private properties can still set their own rules, and common sense goes a long way.

This particular spring assisted knife, with its 3.75-inch blade, lives comfortably inside what many Texans consider a practical EDC size. It’s enough blade for real work without feeling oversized in the pocket. If you’re the kind of buyer who double-checks “switchblade legal Texas” before making a purchase, you’ll appreciate owning an assisted opener that delivers quick, sure action while sidestepping some of the assumptions people make when they hear “switchblade” or see an OTF knife fire.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Spring Assisted Knives

Is a spring assisted knife the same as an automatic, OTF, or switchblade?

No, and that distinction matters. A spring assisted knife like this one needs a push on the flipper tab or thumb stud to start the blade moving; the spring just finishes the job. An automatic knife or switchblade launches the blade from a button or lever alone. An OTF knife is a style of automatic where the blade slides out the front instead of pivoting from the side. This Shadow Wyrm is a side-opening, spring assisted knife—fast, but still fundamentally a manual folder with help.

Are spring assisted knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under Texas law as it stands, owning and carrying a spring assisted knife is legal for most adults in most public places, much like carrying an automatic knife or switchblade. The big things to watch are posted restrictions, sensitive locations, and common-sense choices about where you carry and how you use it. If you’re comfortable carrying a typical folding knife in Texas, this assisted opener fits right into that same world, with a faster deployment when you need it.

Is this a serious collector piece or more of a working EDC?

It does both. The dragon-scale theme and matte black American tanto blade give it enough personality to stand out in a drawer full of plain folders, while the 440 stainless steel, solid liner lock, and spring assisted action make it a capable EDC. A Texas collector who already owns automatics and maybe an OTF knife can slot this in as their mythic, dark-themed user—something they don’t mind scratching up on the ranch or at the jobsite.

Why This Piece Belongs in a Texas Collection

The Shadow Wyrm Quick-Strike Spring Assisted Knife isn’t trying to be every kind of blade at once. It knows exactly what it is: a spring assisted knife with a dragon heart and Texas work ethic. It opens fast, locks solid, and carries light, with styling that nods to fantasy without drifting into costume. In a state where folks know the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, owning the right assisted opener says something about how you buy and how you carry.

If your collection already runs from traditional slipjoints to modern automatics, this knife fills the space in between: a reliable, dark-finished EDC that reminds you why assisted opening folders became popular in the first place. It’s for the Texan who wants their pocketknife to be more than a tool, but still ready to go to work the second that blade clears the handle.