Skip to Content
Senbonzakura Requiem Anime Replica Katana Sword - Blue

Price:

49.99


Parallel Lineage Double-Edge OTF Knife - Black Aluminum
Parallel Lineage Double-Edge OTF Knife - Black Aluminum
41.99 41.99
Tobiume Spirit Anime Katana Replica - Pink Rosewood
Tobiume Spirit Anime Katana Replica - Pink Rosewood
49.99 49.99

Silent Senbonzakura Anime Katana Sword - Blue Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/9407/image_1920?unique=695f00b

9 sold in last 24 hours

This Byakuya Kuchiki Senbonzakura replica sword brings anime precision to a full-size katana form. A 26-inch polished 440 stainless steel blade pairs with a deep blue wooden scabbard and matching blue cord wrap over a hardwood handle, accented in gold. At 40 inches overall, it’s a display-ready anime replica sword that stands out on the wall or on a stand, built for collectors who know the difference between a showpiece sword and an everyday knife.

49.99 49.99 USD 49.99

SW0022B1H

Not Available For Sale

2 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

What This Byakuya Kuchiki Senbonzakura Sword Really Is

This Byakuya Kuchiki Senbonzakura Sword is a full-length anime replica katana sword, built for display, cosplay, and collection. It’s not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade. It’s a fixed-blade, single-edged katana-style sword with a 26-inch polished 440 stainless steel blade, designed to bring one of anime’s most iconic captains into the real world in a way that looks right from across the room.

Texas collectors appreciate clarity: this is a replica sword, not a folding blade, not a spring-assisted knife. You don’t carry this in your pocket; you hang it on your wall, put it on a stand, or bring it to a con. That clean distinction is what lets this Senbonzakura piece sit comfortably alongside your automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades without a hint of confusion.

Anime Replica Katana Sword Details for Serious Collectors

The heart of this Senbonzakura anime sword is its 26-inch 440 stainless steel blade. You get a curved, single-edged katana profile with a polished silver finish and a subtle hamon-style line along the edge for visual depth. It’s paired with a deep blue wooden scabbard and matching blue cord wrap over a hardwood core handle, echoing Byakuya Kuchiki’s calm, composed presence.

A square tsuba in black and gold frames the blade and sets this apart from more traditional round-guard katanas. Gold fittings at the collar and pommel tie into the gold diamond-shaped inlays visible beneath the blue handle wrap, giving the sword a refined, noble look that suits the character.

Blade and Build

440 stainless steel is a familiar name to knife people. It’s tough enough for a display sword, holds its polish well, and resists rust when you keep it indoors. This isn’t a cutting competition blade, but it’s more than enough for a wall-hanger, cosplay carry, or photo backdrop. If you already collect automatic knives or switchblades in 440 stainless, you’ll recognize the steel and know exactly what you’re getting.

Handle, Scabbard, and Color Story

The hardwood handle is cord-wrapped in blue, with gold samegawa-style inlays showing through in sharp diamonds. The deep blue scabbard and matching blue sageo cord give you a unified look from guard to tip. It’s an anime replica katana sword that looks coherent from every angle—no random colors, no cheap-looking mismatch. Blue, gold, and silver do all the talking.

How This Replica Sword Fits a Texas Collection

In a Texas home where the safe already holds automatic knives, OTF knives, and the occasional switchblade, this Senbonzakura sword fills a different lane. It’s a statement piece. At 40 inches overall, it’s meant for a wall, a stand, or a dedicated anime display corner. You don’t buy this instead of an automatic knife; you buy it as the anime centerpiece that sits above them.

Texas collectors like to tell a story with their gear. A clean row of side-opening autos, a couple of OTF knives for mechanical show-and-tell, a traditional lockback or two, and then this deep blue anime katana sword anchoring the whole setup—it all fits together. The contrast between modern mechanisms and a fixed, full-length replica katana makes each piece stand out more.

Texas Context: Displaying an Anime Katana Sword the Right Way

Texas law treats a sword differently than a pocket automatic knife or an OTF knife in your jeans. This Senbonzakura replica is a full-size sword, and while Texas is generous about blade length, common sense still applies. This piece is meant for the house, the collection room, the office wall, or controlled cosplay events—not for casual everyday carry.

If you already know the rules around carrying a switchblade or automatic knife in Texas, think of this Senbonzakura katana sword as the opposite kind of tool: too big to be subtle, too showy to pretend it’s just another EDC. You store it safely, display it proudly, and treat it as part of your collection, not part of your belt.

Distinguishing Swords from Automatic Knives, OTF Knives, and Switchblades

Texas collectors get frustrated when every edged object is called a "switchblade." This Byakuya Kuchiki Senbonzakura piece is a fixed-blade replica sword with no springs, no buttons, and no sliding tracks. You draw it from the scabbard by hand—no automatic knife mechanism, no OTF knife double-action, no side-opening switchblade snap.

That matters. When a guest in your collection room points to the Senbonzakura and asks if it’s some kind of big switchblade, you can explain the difference cleanly. The sword is about presence and character—anime brought into steel and wood. Your automatic knife and OTF knife collection is about mechanisms, springs, and carry. Different tools, different roles, one unified story.

What Texas Buyers Ask About the Senbonzakura Anime Sword

Is this Senbonzakura sword an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No. This Byakuya Kuchiki Senbonzakura sword is a fixed-blade anime replica katana sword. There is no automatic knife mechanism, no side-opening switchblade button, and no OTF knife track. You draw it out of the deep blue scabbard by hand, just like a traditional katana. It’s designed for display, cosplay, and collection, not pocket or waistband carry.

Can I legally own and display this anime replica sword in Texas?

Texas is generally friendly to blades, including long blades, and collectors across the state own swords, katanas, and display pieces like this Senbonzakura replica. Laws can change and local rules can vary, so a responsible Texas buyer checks current state and local regulations for large blades. In practice, this anime katana sword lives on a wall, stand, or in a collection room—kept secure and treated as a display piece, much like your more serious automatic knives and OTF knives are kept stored when not in use.

Why would a knife collector add a Senbonzakura sword to the collection?

Because a collection built only on mechanisms—automatic knives, OTF knives, switchblades—can start to feel technical but not personal. This Senbonzakura anime sword brings character and story into the mix. The deep blue-and-gold color scheme, polished 440 stainless blade, and Byakuya Kuchiki inspiration give you a talking point that’s about more than blade steel and spring tension. It’s the piece you point to when you want to show who you are, not just what you carry.

Why This Byakuya Kuchiki Senbonzakura Sword Belongs in a Texas Collection

This Senbonzakura anime replica katana sword doesn’t try to be something it’s not. It’s not a substitute for an automatic knife, not a giant OTF knife, and not a switchblade on steroids. It’s an honest, full-size anime katana sword built around a 26-inch 440 stainless blade, a deep blue scabbard, blue cord wrap, and gold accents that read as refined instead of loud.

In a Texas home, that straightforward honesty matters. You keep your working blades where they belong, your automatic knives and OTFs tuned and ready, and your display pieces where people can see them. This Senbonzakura sword is for the display side of your life—the part that remembers the first time you saw those drifting blades on screen and thought, "One day, I’m hanging that on my wall." Owning it marks you as the kind of collector who knows mechanisms, respects the law, and still leaves room for a bit of anime legend in the rack.