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Shadow Camo Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Matte Black

Price:

4.46


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Blackout Ambush Quick-Deploy EDC Knife - Shadow Camo

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This isn’t a toy; it’s a decision in your pocket. The Blackout Ambush is a quick-deploy assisted opening EDC knife with a matte black, partially serrated clip point that bites into rope, webbing, and cardboard without drama. Shadow camo scales lock into your hand, spine jimping keeps your thumb anchored, and the liner lock snaps home with authority. Thumb-stud assisted action, a low-profile pocket clip, and a glass breaker on the pommel make this a no-nonsense tool built for real carry and real work.

4.46 4.46 USD 4.46

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Assisted Opening Knife for Sale That’s Built for Real Use, Not Shelf Appeal

The Blackout Ambush Quick-Deploy EDC Knife - Shadow Camo is what happens when an assisted opening knife is treated like a serious tool instead of impulse-bin filler. Matte black, partially serrated clip point, thumb-stud assist, liner lock, and a glass breaker on the tail – every element points to one thing: practical, fast, controlled deployment when it actually matters.

Mechanically, this is an assisted opening folding knife, not an automatic and not an OTF. You start the blade with the thumb stud, the internal spring takes over, and the action drives it decisively into lockup. That subtle distinction matters in the real world – both in how it carries and how it’s treated legally.

Why This Assisted Opening Knife for Sale Feels Faster Than Half the Automatics

Speed is only half the story. Control is the rest. With this knife, the thumb stud gives you a positive index point; once you nudge it past the detent, the assist engages and the blade snaps open with a clean, linear motion. There’s no lazy half-deployment, no gritty hesitation; the spring tension is balanced so the blade tracks straight into the liner lock every time.

Because it’s a side-opening assisted knife, your hand never has to hunt for position. The finger-grooved, shadow camo handle anchors your grip, while spine jimping gives your thumb a fixed, non-slip ramp. That combination lets you open and go to work in one motion, without having to readjust mid-cut.

Thumb Stud + Assist: The Deployment That Just Works

Thumb studs are unforgiving when done badly; they’ll expose sloppy geometry in an instant. Here, the stud is placed to give a natural arc of motion from pocket draw to deployment. As your thumb rolls forward, the detent breaks right when you have leverage, the assist engages, and the blade finishes the journey under spring power. It’s predictable, repeatable, and doesn’t require contortions or wrist flick theatrics.

Liner Lock Security You Can Actually Trust

A liner lock is only as good as its interface. This one engages with solid, audible contact on the tang, without overtravel. There’s enough lock bar access to disengage with gloves, but not so much that your grip will inadvertently move it. The result: a fast-deploying knife that stays put in hard cuts, pries, and twists – exactly what you want in a tactical-flavored EDC.

EDC Reality: An Assisted Opening Knife for Sale That’s Built to Disappear Until Needed

Plenty of knives claim to be everyday carry; this one is built for it. The matte black blade doesn’t scream for attention, and the shadow camo handle reads as quiet, functional gear rather than costume. The pocket clip rides deep enough that the knife vanishes under the pocket line, hardware tucked and low-key.

In hand, the ergonomics are unmistakably utility-driven: pronounced finger grooves, aggressive texturing on the scales, and a contour that locks your knuckles behind the guard. That means you can put real pressure behind the partially serrated edge without worrying about sliding forward when things get slick or when you’re hacking through tough material.

Partially Serrated Clip Point: The Workhorse Edge Configuration

The clip point blade gives you a fine, controllable tip for detail work – opening packages cleanly, scoring material, digging into tape or plastic without collateral damage. Behind that, the partial serrations near the handle take over on fibrous, stubborn tasks: rope, paracord, nylon straps, webbing, zip-ties. You can choke back on the handle and let the serrations do their job, or choke up near the tip for precision.

Matte Black Finish and Camo Scales: Purpose, Not Fashion

The matte black finish tones down reflections, which matters in both tactical and hunting contexts – no stray glint giving away your position or pulling eyes where you don’t want them. The shadow camo pattern on the handle isn’t there to impress Instagram; it meshes with the rest of your kit – packs, plate carriers, or just a camo jacket – and telegraphs that this knife lives outdoors and in the field, not only on a desk.

Mechanics That Matter More Than Hype

This knife is aimed at the buyer who actually uses their gear. The assisted opening mechanism gives you near-automatic speed with more control and, in many jurisdictions, a friendlier legal profile than a true automatic knife or switchblade. The liner lock, glass breaker, and aggressive jimping turn it into a capable emergency tool as well as an EDC cutter.

Those decorative blade cutouts and handle slots aren’t just for looks; they lighten the build slightly without compromising rigidity, trimming just enough weight to make it pocketable all day. The exposed screw construction means disassembly and cleaning are straightforward if you’re the type who actually maintains your knives – and if you’re buying at this level, you probably are.

Glass Breaker: The Quiet Emergency Feature

The glass breaker at the pommel is one of those details you hope you never need, but you’ll be glad it’s there if you do. A deliberate strike at a corner of automotive glass, and you’re through. For anyone who spends time on the road, works around vehicles, or just thinks in worst-case scenarios, that little carbide point turns your EDC knife into a legitimate emergency tool.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) mainly governs interstate commerce and shipment of automatic knives and switchblades. It does not outright ban ownership nationwide. Instead, states and even cities layer on their own rules about what you can own, carry, or conceal. Many states treat assisted opening knives differently from true automatic knives, because with an assisted opener you initiate blade movement manually before a spring takes over.

This particular knife is an assisted opening folding knife, not an automatic or OTF. In many jurisdictions, that places it in a more permissive category than a button-fired switchblade. But laws change and local ordinances matter. Before you carry any knife – automatic, OTF, switchblade, or assisted – check your specific state and city regulations and, if needed, consult a qualified legal source. Nothing here is legal advice; it’s a framework so you know what questions to ask.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

Mechanically, here’s how it breaks down:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade: In common U.S. usage, these are the same thing. A spring opens the blade fully when you press a button, lever, or similar control. Your hand doesn’t have to move the blade – the mechanism does it once you trip it.
  • OTF knife (out-the-front): A specific type of automatic (or manual) where the blade travels in and out through the front of the handle. Many OTFs are double-action automatics – the same sliding control both deploys and retracts the blade under spring tension.
  • Assisted opening knife (this knife): A folding knife where you start moving the blade manually with a thumb stud, flipper tab, or similar, and once it passes a detent point, a spring assists and drives it the rest of the way open. You are part of the mechanism, which is why many laws treat assisted knives differently from switchblades.

This Blackout Ambush is an assisted opening side-folder, not an OTF and not a button-fired switchblade.

What makes this assisted opening knife worth buying?

For a buyer who cares about function over hype, three things stand out:

  • Dialed-in assisted action: The balance of detent and spring tension gives you repeatable, one-handed deployment without feeling twitchy or unsafe in the pocket.
  • Real-world edge configuration: A matte black clip point with partial serrations is exactly what you want if you split time between everyday cutting and harder, fibrous jobs.
  • Emergency-capable build: Glass breaker, liner lock, aggressive grip texture, and low-profile pocket clip turn this from "just another folder" into a realistic part of an emergency or tactical kit.

Add the shadow camo aesthetic and the fact that it’s an assisted opener – often easier to carry legally than a true automatic knife – and you’ve got a work-ready piece that respects both the mechanics and the realities of everyday carry.

For the Buyer Who Wants More Than Hype in an Assisted Knife for Sale

If you’re the kind of enthusiast who can feel the difference between lazy spring tuning and a properly tensioned assist, this knife was built for you. It’s a quick-deploy assisted opening knife that favors control, grip, and emergency capability over trend-chasing. You get the satisfaction of a decisive, mechanical snap into lockup every time you hit the thumb stud – and the quiet confidence of knowing you chose an EDC tool for the right reasons, not just the loudest marketing line.

Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Handle Finish Matte
Theme Camo
Safety Liner Lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Thumb stud
Lock Type Liner lock