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Dragon Arc Precision Throwing Knife Set - Black Steel

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5.25


DISC  LRG PRY BR HVY DTY
DISC LRG PRY BR HVY DTY
7.00 7.00
Stealth Command Large Strike Automatic Knife - Black Grivory
Stealth Command Large Strike Automatic Knife - Black Grivory
64.97 64.97

Dragon Arc Triple Flight Throwing Knife Set - Black Steel

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Designed for throwers who actually practice, this dragon throwing knife set keeps things tight and repeatable. Three matching black steel throwers share the same 6.5-inch profile, ring pommel, and trailing-point arc, so every release feels the same. The white dragon graphics aren’t just for show—they give quick visual orientation as the blades track through the air. A compact belt sheath keeps the full set at hand, turning casual backyard sessions into deliberate, consistent throwing reps.

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TK087365BDR

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)
  • Set Count
  • Sheath/Holster

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Dragon Arc Triple Flight Throwing Knife Set - Black Steel

The Dragon Arc Triple Flight Throwing Knife Set is built for throwers who care more about clean rotation and repeatable groupings than cosplay flash. Yes, the white dragon artwork hits hard under the lights. But under that fantasy skin, you’ve got three compact, matched throwers in black steel that actually want to live in the air, not just on a wall.

Why This Throwing Knife Set Works in the Real World

Plenty of fantasy throwing knives look the part and fly like sheet metal. This set leans into function first: 6.5-inch overall length, about a 4.5-inch sweeping trailing-point blade, and a minimalist steel handle with a ring pommel. That full-steel construction means every knife in the set carries the same mass profile, so once you dial in your distance and release, you’re not fighting inconsistent weights.

The trailing-point arc isn’t an accident either. That curve shifts material forward, giving these throwers a slight blade-heavy balance that helps beginners feel the rotation and gives more experienced throwers a predictable, repeatable stick.

Mechanics of a Consistent Throwing Knife Set

Throwing knives don’t have springs, locks, or automatic deployment to obsess over, so the engineering focus shifts to balance, geometry, and consistency. That’s where this dragon throwing knife set quietly does its best work.

Matched Geometry, Matched Flight

Each knife in the set mirrors the others: same 6.5-inch length, same blade curvature, same ring pommel. For real practice, that matters more than exotic steels or gimmick edges. You can work half-spin, full-spin, and longer-distance rotations without mentally recalculating for a random outlier in the set.

The ring pommel does more than look tactical. It trims excess weight at the rear and gives you a reliable index point for both hammer and pinch grips. Slide a finger through for certain throws, or use it as a tactile stop so your grip lands in the same place every time.

Steel and Edge Philosophy for Throwers

On a throwing knife, especially a budget-friendly set like this, steel choice is about toughness and resilience more than surgical edge retention. You want a blade that shrugs off repeated impact into wood and the occasional bad hit on a hardback, not a mirror-polished slicer that chips the first weekend.

The black-coated steel here is tuned for that reality. It ships with a usable edge but not an ultra-thin, fragile grind. That’s intentional. A slightly more robust bevel stands up better to the abuse that comes with learning new distances and working through inconsistent targets.

Design Details Collectors Actually Notice

Collectors and regular backyard throwers look for the same thing first: visual cohesion that doesn’t undermine function. This dragon throwing knife set threads that needle better than most budget fantasy gear.

The white dragon graphics are bold but intelligently placed along the blade flats, away from the edge. That means they don’t interfere with the cutting geometry and hold up longer under normal use. The contrasting silver edges against the black blade stock also give you a quick-read visual as the knives leave your hand—a subtle but real aid when you’re refining rotation and watching your line through the air.

Laid out on a shelf or in a case, three matched black steel profiles with identical dragon art read as a coherent mini-collection: same motif, same geometry, unified presence. It doesn’t look like you grabbed three random throwers off a clearance rack.

Carry and Practice Reality with This Throwing Knife Set

Throwing knives that live in a drawer don’t make you better. This set includes a compact black belt sheath that actually makes it out the door with you. Three dedicated slots keep the knives separated so they’re not chewing each other up in transit.

The compact size means you can carry the set on a belt for backyard sessions or pack it in a range bag without burning space. At 6.5 inches overall, each knife is large enough to give a real throwing experience but small enough that you’re not hauling around oversized fantasy daggers just to work on consistency.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Even though this product is a fixed-blade throwing knife set—not an automatic knife, OTF, or switchblade—the same buyers often cross-shop all three categories. The questions below come up constantly in that broader conversation, and the answers matter if you’re building a serious collection that includes automatics alongside your throwing knives.

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, automatic knives (the broad family that includes side-opening autos and many knives casually called “switchblades”) are regulated at both the federal and state levels. Federal law mainly addresses interstate commerce and shipping, restricting how automatic knives and true switchblades can be moved across state lines or mailed. It does not create a simple nationwide “legal/illegal” line for ownership.

The real deciding factor is your state—and often your city—law. Some states allow automatic knives for ownership and carry with few restrictions. Others limit blade length, require specific conditions for carry (like being actively engaged in hunting or work), or ban certain automatic or switchblade mechanisms outright. Because these rules change, you should always check current state and local statutes before you buy or carry an automatic knife, OTF, or switchblade. Throwing knives like this dragon set are usually regulated under general knife or weapons laws, which also vary by jurisdiction.

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

The terms get abused constantly, so let’s strip the marketing out of it:

  • Automatic knife (side-opening): A folding knife where a spring drives the blade open from the side when you press a button or actuator. Once locked, it behaves like a standard folder. Most modern autos in this category ride on coil or leaf springs.
  • OTF (out-the-front) knife: A knife where the blade travels linearly out the front of the handle, usually under spring tension. Double-action OTF knives both deploy and retract via the same sliding control; single-action OTFs typically auto-deploy but must be manually reset or retracted.
  • Switchblade: Historically, this is the legal and cultural term—especially in U.S. law—for many automatic knives, particularly side-opening autos. In casual speech, people use “switchblade” for everything automatic, but from an enthusiast standpoint, it’s more precise to call a knife automatic or OTF based on its mechanism.

This dragon throwing knife set is neither automatic nor OTF. These are fixed-blade throwers with no springs, no buttons, and no deployment mechanism—just steel, balance, and rotation.

What makes this throwing knife set worth buying?

Three factors put this dragon throwing knife set above the usual fantasy fodder: matched geometry, real-world usability, and coherent design. All three knives share the same length, weight profile, and trailing-point arc, which gives you predictable rotation and makes practice efficient instead of frustrating.

The full-steel construction with ring pommals is simple, durable, and tuned for repetition. You’re not babying fragile scales or fiddly hardware between sessions. Add in the belt-ready sheath and you’ve got a set that’s easy to grab whenever you’ve got ten free minutes and a willing target.

Finally, the white dragon art and black steel finish give the set a unified visual identity. It looks intentional in a collection, not like an impulse buy. If you’re the kind of buyer who appreciates clean mechanics but still wants something with visual bite, this hits that middle ground.

For Collectors Who Train, Not Just Display

This Dragon Arc Triple Flight Throwing Knife Set isn’t trying to compete with your high-end automatic knife for EDC duty or your grail OTF for mechanical bragging rights. It’s built for a different ritual: stepping out back, pacing off your distances, and chasing tighter patterns with tools that behave the same throw after throw.

If your collection already includes side-opening automatics, double-action OTFs, and the occasional old-school switchblade, adding a matched dragon throwing knife set brings a different kind of satisfaction—the discipline of flight instead of deployment. Three blades, one feel, no excuses.

Blade Length (inches) 4.5
Overall Length (inches) 6.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Trailing Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Steel
Theme Dragon
Handle Length (inches) 2
Set Count 3
Sheath/Holster Sheath included