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Dragon Tempest Assisted Opening Knife - Rainbow Steel

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9.99


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Stormscale Dragon Assisted Opening Knife - Rainbow Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2071/image_1920?unique=55317fd

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This assisted opening knife brings a full dragon storm to your pocket. A rainbow steel clip point rides in a curved, ringed handle that locks into the hand and snaps open with a clean spring assist and liner lock. It’s not an automatic knife or an OTF knife—it’s a fast, one-hand assisted opener built for Texas-style everyday carry. Flashy enough for the display case, controlled enough for real use, it’s a dragon that actually works.

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A33RB

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  • 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 Color Rainbow
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Steel
Theme Dragon
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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Stormscale Dragon: A Texas-Worthy Assisted Opening Knife

This Stormscale Dragon isn’t pretending to be an automatic knife or an OTF knife. It’s a true assisted opening knife: a spring-assisted, side-opening folder that waits on your touch, then snaps the rest of the way open with a clean, confident kick. That distinction matters to Texas collectors who know their blades and don’t like their terms mixed up.

You get a rainbow steel clip point blade, a matching iridescent steel handle, and a full dragon relief that runs the length of the grip. It’s a fantasy-forward look wrapped around a very real, very usable assisted opening mechanism—pocket-ready for Texas everyday carry.

How This Assisted Opening Knife Actually Works

Mechanically, this knife is a spring-assisted, side-opening folder. You start the motion with the flipper tab; the internal spring takes over and drives the blade into lockup. That makes it an assisted opening knife, not a fully automatic knife and not an OTF knife. The difference is simple:

  • Assisted opener: You start the blade manually; spring finishes the job.
  • Automatic knife / switchblade: A button or switch deploys the blade from fully closed with no manual start.
  • OTF knife: Blade travels out the front of the handle instead of pivoting from the side.

This Stormscale Dragon uses a familiar liner lock to secure the rainbow clip point once it’s open. Jimping along the spine near the base gives your thumb traction for push cuts, and the exaggerated curve of the handle rolls naturally into a secure grip. The finger ring at the pommel gives you one more point of control, especially in tight or gloved handling.

Side-Opening Precision, Not OTF Flash

Where an OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front, this assisted opener works like a traditional folding knife with a boost. For Texas buyers who already own an automatic knife or even a switchblade, this piece fills that middle lane: fast as you need it, but still grounded in a familiar folding profile.

Collector-Grade Rainbow Steel and Dragon Detail

The rainbow finish is more than a paint job. The iridescent steel on both blade and handle gives the dragon engraving depth and movement—greens, blues, and purples catching light across the scales. It’s the kind of visual pop that pulls customers across a counter or across a room at a Texas gun show.

Between the clip point profile, the recurved edge, and the ringed pommel, this assisted opening knife reads like a fantasy piece at first glance, but the build is all work-ready steel and straightforward hardware. That balance between show and go is what keeps it in a pocket instead of just a display case.

Assisted Opening Knife vs Automatic Knife vs OTF Knife

Texas collectors don’t like sloppy language around knife types, and they shouldn’t. A buyer looking for an automatic knife or a true switchblade wants to know exactly what they’re getting. This Stormscale Dragon sits squarely in the assisted opening knife lane.

  • Assisted Opening Knife (this one): Side-opening, spring helps after you nudge the flipper or thumb stud. No button actuation.
  • Automatic Knife / Switchblade: Push a button or switch, blade opens under full spring power from fully closed.
  • OTF Knife: Blade stored inline with the handle and shoots straight out the front, usually automatic, sometimes manual.

If you already own an automatic knife or an OTF knife, this dragon gives you something different: one-hand speed without the full automatic mechanism. If you’re easing into the world of faster deployment, an assisted opener like this is often where Texas buyers start—and many stay.

Texas Carry Realities for an Assisted Opening Knife

Texas law has opened up knife carry over the years, but serious buyers still want clarity. This Stormscale Dragon is an assisted opening knife, not a switchblade and not an OTF automatic. Under current Texas law, the main questions are blade length and location—not whether the knife is assisted, automatic, or a traditional folder. Assisted opening knives are generally treated like other folding knives here.

That said, a responsible Texas collector pays attention to two things:

  • Local rules: Certain locations and municipalities can have their own restrictions, especially around larger blades.
  • Context: A rainbow dragon knife in a pocket clip at a barbecue is one thing; the same knife at a school event or restricted venue is another.

Functionally, this assisted opener carries like any other pocket knife. The pocket clip keeps it anchored, the curved handle disappears against the leg, and the finger ring gives you an anchor point when you draw. For a Texas buyer who wants something more striking than a plain EDC but less aggressive than a combat-style automatic knife, this lands in a comfortable middle.

Everyday Tasks in a Texas Setting

For day-to-day use, the rainbow clip point does what a good side-opening blade should: open boxes in the shop, cut cord in the truck, trim tape at a booth, or handle light camp chores. The assisted opening mechanism means you’re not fumbling with two hands when you’re already holding something else, and the liner lock gives you simple one-hand close when you’re done.

Collector Value for Texas Dragon Fans

From a collector’s perspective, this assisted opening knife earns its place in three ways: theme, finish, and feel in hand. The dragon theme draws fantasy and anime enthusiasts, the rainbow steel appeals to anyone who likes iridescent hardware, and the finger ring plus recurved handle create a distinct silhouette that doesn’t blend into the rest of the drawer.

It also rounds out a mechanism-focused collection. If your case already has a side-opening automatic knife and a double-action OTF knife, dropping this assisted opening knife next to them tells the whole deployment story at a glance. You can show friends the difference between an assisted opener, a switchblade, and an OTF knife without cracking a book.

Display Presence vs. Pocket Reality

On the table, the dragon engraving and rainbow blade pull eyes. In the pocket, it behaves like a straightforward EDC. Texas retailers get both: a knife that sells itself on looks, then keeps customers happy when they carry it. Collectors get a showpiece that doesn’t have to stay behind glass.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Assisted Opening Knife

Is this a switchblade, an automatic knife, or an OTF knife?

This is an assisted opening knife, not a switchblade and not an OTF. You start the blade manually with the flipper tab; the internal spring only assists the motion. A true automatic knife or switchblade opens from fully closed with a button or switch, and an OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle. Here, you’ve got a side-opening, spring-assisted folder—fast, but not full-auto.

Is an assisted opening knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, assisted opening knives are generally treated like other folding knives, not singled out as a separate, restricted class. The big concerns are blade length, age, and restricted locations, not whether the knife is assisted, automatic, or OTF. Laws can change, and local rules can differ, so any serious Texas collector should double-check current statutes and city ordinances before carrying—but as a mechanism, this assisted opener is on the more straightforward side of Texas knife law.

Why would a collector choose this over a plain EDC?

Because it does three jobs at once: it gives you a functional assisted opening knife you can actually carry, it puts a full dragon-and-rainbow fantasy theme in your pocket instead of just on a shelf, and it plugs a real gap between your manual folders, automatic knives, and OTF knives. A plain EDC can cut, but it won’t tell a story about mechanism, style, and Texas carry the way this one does.

In the end, the Stormscale Dragon Assisted Opening Knife is for the Texan who can tell you the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and an assisted opener without raising their voice—and likes a little color in their steel. It’s part working blade, part conversation piece, and entirely honest about what it is. That’s the kind of knife that belongs in a Texas collection.