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Apocalypse Vortex Biohazard Throwing Stars - Black & Green Steel

Price:

39.99


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Toxic Vortex Biohazard Throwing Stars - Black & Green Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5423/image_1920?unique=0e5cb7b

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These throwing stars bring six-point balance, stainless steel bite, and a toxic biohazard profile that stands out on any Texas range. Each 4-inch star is cut for smooth rotation, with high-visibility black and neon green finishes that are easy to track in flight. The six-piece set rides in a nylon pouch, ready for backyard practice, martial arts training, or eye-catching display. For Texas collectors who know their blades, this is the biohazard-themed throwing set that actually throws right.

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What These Biohazard Throwing Stars Really Are

The Biohazard Vortex Balanced Throwing Stars set is exactly what it looks like: six-point stainless steel throwing stars, cut for balance first and style second. No spring, no automatic knife trickery, no OTF blade hiding inside a handle. Just true shuriken-inspired throwing steel dressed in black and neon green with a biohazard twist.

On a site that talks a lot about automatic knives, OTF knives, and even the occasional switchblade, these stand apart. They’re not a pocket carry, they’re not a folding mechanism, and they’re not something you’re going to confuse with your everyday knife. They are purpose-built throwing stars for range time, training, and collection display — and that’s exactly how a serious Texas buyer should look at them.

Balanced Throwing Stars Built for Clean Rotation

Each star in this set runs about 4 inches across with six evenly spaced points. That six-point layout is what gives you predictable spin. The steel is cut in a true vortex pattern around a circular center cutout, keeping the weight where it needs to be so the stars leave the hand straight and rotate clean.

Where an automatic knife or OTF knife puts its engineering into deployment mechanisms and springs, a throwing star puts its engineering into balance. You feel it the first time you throw — no weird wobble, no surprise hook in mid-air, just a straight, honest flight if your form is right. These stars are built for that kind of repeatable performance.

Six-Point Vortex Design

Six points, evenly spaced, means you’re not hunting for the “right” edge on the draw. Any grip can be turned into a consistent release. The center cutout lightens the middle just enough to keep the rotation smooth, and the biohazard-style symbol that wraps that circle isn’t just for looks — it mirrors the spin you see once the star leaves your fingers.

Stainless Steel You Can Throw All Day

These stars are stainless steel front to back. For a Texas collector or range owner, that means fewer worries about sweat, humidity, or a little Hill Country dust. Wipe them down after a session, keep the points touched up as needed, and they’ll ride in that nylon pouch for years of backyard throwing or school training demos.

Black & Green Visibility: Why the Color Matters

The black-and-green finish does more than lean into the biohazard fantasy. On a real Texas backyard range — grass, dirt, mesquite, maybe a plywood backstop — visibility matters. The neon green is easy to track in flight and easier to find when you miss high or low. The black stars with green accents give you contrast, while the full neon green stars jump out against most backgrounds.

If you’re used to working with black-coated automatic knives or low-glare OTF knives, you know how easy they can disappear if you set them down. These throwing stars go the other direction: tactical fantasy look, but high-visibility reality, which is exactly what you want when you’re throwing six at a time.

Set Composition for Real Practice

This is a six-piece set: three black stars with green accents, three green stars with black accents. That alternating layout makes it easy to tell which throws were yours if you’re sharing a target, or to track different distances and grips by color. For instructors or range owners in Texas, it also helps you break up practice rounds between students without confusion.

Texas Use: Range, Ranch, and Collection Wall

In Texas, these throwing stars live three main lives: as range tools, as backyard toys for the grown-ups, and as display pieces on the wall next to your favorite automatic knife or OTF knife. They are not an EDC knife, they are not a switchblade, and they’re not something you slip into a boot for carry. They’re for controlled environments where throwing is the point.

If you’ve got a barn wall, a stand of pines, or a framed-up target on a fence line, this set fits right in. They ride in a nylon pouch between sessions, and when you lay them out on a bench with your other gear — maybe that side-opening automatic knife you actually carry — they look like part of a serious Texas collection, not a party-store toy.

Texas Law Context: Throwing Stars vs. Knives

Texas law has loosened up a lot on blades over the last decade, especially for knives, automatic knives, and big fixed blades. Switchblade bans came down. OTF knives and side-opening automatics moved into the everyday carry conversation. Throwing stars sit in a slightly different bucket: they’re not knives in the pocket sense, they’re purpose-built projectiles.

As of recent Texas law, most "location-restricted" and "illegal knives" language has shifted, but practical reality still applies: these are throwing weapons, and a smart Texas buyer treats them with that respect. Use them on private property or at a range, store them responsibly, and don’t confuse them with a legal carry knife just because they’re sharp.

If you’re carrying an automatic knife or OTF knife in town, that’s one conversation. Walking around with a pouch of throwing stars in public is another. A collector who knows the difference keeps these for practice and display, not for everyday belt wear.

Collector Value for the Texas Blade Crowd

From a collector’s standpoint, this set earns its keep in three ways: the theme, the balance, and the presentation. The biohazard motif plays well with zombie, apocalypse, or hazmat-themed blades. The balance makes it more than decoration — you can actually step outside and throw them. The included nylon pouch keeps the set together in a drawer, range bag, or display cabinet.

If your collection already has an automatic knife with toxic green accents, or an OTF knife with a black-and-green handle, these stars tie that look together. Line them up in a shadow box or across a shelf and they tell a clear story: this isn’t a random pile of steel, it’s a themed Texas collection built by someone who cares about both performance and style.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Stars

How are throwing stars different from an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

A throwing star is a fixed, flat piece of steel designed to be thrown, not carried like a pocket knife. There’s no spring, no button, and no out-the-front mechanism. An automatic knife or switchblade has a blade that jumps out of the handle with spring power, usually side-opening. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle. All three are sharp tools, but only the throwing star is built purely as a projectile, not a cutting or utility tool.

Are throwing stars legal to own and use in Texas?

Texas law has become far more blade-friendly, especially for knives, automatic knives, and even large fixed blades. While the old blanket bans on certain weapons have eased, you should still treat throwing stars as weapons designed for controlled environments. On private property, training facilities, or dedicated ranges, responsible use is generally the standard. As always, check the most current Texas statutes and any local ordinances, and don’t assume rules for your pocket knife automatically apply to throwing weapons.

Who is this throwing star set really for?

This set is for Texas buyers who enjoy the act of throwing as much as they enjoy collecting. Martial arts students, backyard target junkies, and collectors who already appreciate the finer points of an automatic knife or OTF knife will recognize the value here. The six-star layout, balanced design, and biohazard theme make it a natural fit for anyone building a coordinated, visually striking blade collection that actually gets used.

In the end, these Biohazard Vortex Balanced Throwing Stars belong with Texans who know exactly what they’re buying: not a switchblade, not an OTF knife, not an everyday automatic, but a purpose-built throwing set with the right balance, the right steel, and a loud black-and-green attitude. If that sounds like your range and your wall, this set will feel right at home.