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Shadow Silhouette Stealth-Edge Throwing Cards - Silver Finish

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22.99


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ShadowDeck Precision Ninja Throwing Cards - Silver Metal

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These ShadowDeck Precision Ninja Throwing Cards take classic shuriken attitude and flatten it into a sleek, silver deck built to fly straight. Each brushed metal card carries a bold black ninja silhouette and sharpened perimeter edges for clean, repeatable throws. The slim profile rides easy in the included nylon case, whether you’re headed to the backyard target or adding a modern ninja accent to your Texas collection. Quiet impact, clear feedback, and a look that reads serious from any distance.

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ShadowDeck Ninja Throwing Cards for the Texas Collector

The ShadowDeck Precision Ninja Throwing Cards are modern shuriken flattened into card form — brushed silver metal rectangles with sharpened perimeter edges and bold black ninja silhouettes. These aren’t playing cards and they’re not traditional throwing stars. They’re purpose-built throwing cards, tuned for a clean arc, a quiet thud, and instant feedback every time they hit your target.

A serious Texas buyer wants to know exactly what they’re holding. This is a dedicated throwing weapon set, not a pocket knife, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade. It belongs on the practice range, in a display case, or in the hand of someone who respects edge tools and trains with intent.

What Makes These Throwing Cards Different from Stars and Knives

Traditional throwing stars — the shuriken most folks picture — are radial, with points extending from a center hub. These throwing cards keep the shuriken heritage but stretch it into a rectangular card profile. The entire perimeter is beveled and sharpened, so whichever edge lands first can bite into wood and tell you exactly how you released.

That long, straight edge gives a different kind of training feedback than a compact throwing star. You’ll feel the air resistance, watch the flat plane track through the throw, and see clearly whether you’re releasing nose-up, nose-down, or dead level. For a Texas collector who already owns a few throwing stars, these cards add a new flight story to the collection — same family, different behavior.

Because they’re flat and compact, some buyers might lump them in with gimmick card-style knives. These are not folding knives, not assisted openers, and certainly not any flavor of automatic knife. No springs, no buttons, no OTF mechanism, no switchblade action — just steel, balance, and clean edges built for throwing practice and display.

Mechanics and Flight: How These Throwing Cards Work

Balanced Edges and Clean Rotation

Each ShadowDeck throwing card is cut to a uniform size with a consistent brushed silver finish. The sharpened perimeter edge is beveled in a way that encourages clean penetration while still maintaining enough mass for stable flight. Because every side of the rectangle behaves predictably, you can practice half-spin, full-spin, and no-spin throws without fighting the design.

Where a knife, an OTF knife, or a side-opening automatic knife focuses on deployment speed and cutting performance, these throwing cards focus entirely on rotational control. The flat profile glides through the air, the wide face catches just enough air to telegraph bad technique, and the edge gives you an honest reading when you hit the target off-angle.

Ninja Silhouettes with a Modern Edge

The black ninja silhouettes printed on each card aren’t just decoration — they give you an instant visual reference during the throw. As the card spins, that dark figure blurs around the silver field, making it easier to track rotation and release timing out of the corner of your eye. For a collector, the five unique poses also make the set display-friendly. You can fan them out in a case, stand them upright, or pair them with more traditional throwing stars to show the evolution from classic shuriken to modern throwing card profiles.

Texas Use, Display, and Law Context

Texas has grown more permissive with blades over the years, but that doesn’t mean every edge tool belongs in your pocket at H-E-B. These throwing cards are best treated as specialty throwing weapons and collector pieces — they live in your gear bag, at your backyard target, or in your display cabinet, not clipped inside your jeans next to an everyday carry knife.

Unlike an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade where Texas law and local rules can get technical around carry and locations, these throwing cards raise different questions: intent, venue, and common sense. Carried respectfully to and from a legal range, martial arts studio, or private property, they fit comfortably into the Texas culture of responsible weapons ownership. Waved around in the wrong setting, they’ll draw the kind of attention no collector wants.

The included nylon case keeps the edges covered and the set together. For a Texas buyer driving out to the lease, heading to a backyard get-together, or stocking a game shed with targets, that case makes transport straightforward and safe. Treat them with the same respect you’d give a throwing axe or a bow — tools for sport, not toys.

Collector Value for the Texas Edge Enthusiast

If your collection already runs the gamut from everyday carry folders to automatic knives, OTF knives, and classic switchblades, these ShadowDeck throwing cards fill a different lane on the shelf. They’re part martial-arts gear, part design piece. The silver-and-black palette looks sharp under case lighting, and the consistent card footprint lets you stack or fan them in a way that a handful of mismatched throwing stars never quite manage.

Because they’re a defined set — multiple cards, matching finish, distinct ninja poses — they feel complete right out of the box. There’s a story you can see at a glance: a modern take on shuriken, turned into a deck that flies straight and lands with authority. Retailers can build a visual narrative around that ShadowDeck look, and private collectors can anchor a whole ninja-themed section of a collection with just this one set.

They also pair well with more conventional blades. Set them alongside a slim automatic knife for carry, an OTF knife for quick deployment, and a traditional switchblade for mechanical history, and these throwing cards become the airborne counterpart — the piece you step outside to use when you feel like hearing steel meet wood instead of just cutting twine or opening boxes.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Cards

Are throwing cards the same as throwing stars, automatic knives, or switchblades?

No. Throwing cards are in the same broad family as throwing stars and other shuriken-style weapons, but they’re a different shape and purpose. These ShadowDeck throwing cards are flat, rectangular shuriken with sharpened edges and no moving parts. An automatic knife or switchblade is a folding blade that opens under spring tension when you hit a button. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on a track. These cards don’t open, don’t deploy, and don’t act like a knife — they’re designed to fly, rotate, and stick.

Are throwing cards legal to own and use in Texas?

Texas law has become more blade-friendly, and owning throwing cards or other shuriken-style tools is generally legal for adults. The bigger questions are where and how you carry and use them. On private Texas property, at a range, or in a controlled training setting, responsible use is typically fine. In schools, certain public buildings, or posted locations, any edged weapon — whether it’s a throwing star, an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade — can get you in trouble fast. Laws change and local rules vary, so a serious collector always checks current Texas statutes and any posted signs before carrying.

Who should add these throwing cards to a Texas collection?

These ShadowDeck throwing cards fit the Texan who already understands the difference between a working knife and a purpose-built throwing tool. If you’ve got your everyday carry sorted, maybe a favorite automatic knife for convenience and an OTF knife or classic switchblade for mechanical interest, this set adds a new skill and a new look. They’re for the buyer who wants to step outside, set up a target, and hear that quiet thud as steel finds wood — and then come back in and display a modern ninja deck that actually earns the space it takes up.

In the end, these ShadowDeck Precision Ninja Throwing Cards are for Texans who like their steel honest. No hidden springs, no marketing confusion, just flat shuriken cards that fly true, look sharp in silver and black, and sit comfortably beside your knives without pretending to be one. If you know the difference between a throwing weapon, an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, this set speaks your language.