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Dragon Tempest Assisted Opening Knife - Rainbow Steel

Price:

5.93


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Ringed Dragon Strike Assisted EDC Knife - Rainbow Steel

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This assisted opening knife isn’t pretending to be subtle. A rainbow-finished clip point rides in a sculpted dragon handle with a ringed pommel, giving you fast, positive indexing on the draw. The spring assist snaps the blade into lockup with a clean liner engagement, while jimping at the spine and a pocket clip keep it practical for everyday carry. It’s the fantasy-forward EDC piece you reach for when you want action, color, and a dragon that actually works in the hand.

5.93 5.93 USD 5.93 8.99

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

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Assisted Opening Knife for Sale with Real Dragon Attitude

This is not your quiet, gray pocket tool. The Dragon Tempest concept takes a spring-assisted opening knife and dresses it in full rainbow steel with a sculpted dragon handle and ringed pommel. Under the fantasy skin, though, you’ve still got a practical EDC folder with a liner lock, flipper tab, and pocket clip that behaves like a proper everyday knife.

If you’re looking for an automatic knife for sale and keep finding the same blacked-out clones, this is the counterpoint: assisted action, dragon artwork, and a blade that actually wants to be carried, not just stared at.

Why This Assisted Knife Belongs Next to Any Automatic Knife for Sale

Mechanically, this knife is a spring-assisted folder, not a true automatic. That matters. With a true automatic knife for sale, the blade deploys when you hit a button and the spring does all the work from fully closed. On this piece, you initiate the motion with the flipper tab; once the blade passes the detent, the internal spring takes over and drives it to full lockup.

The result is a fast, one-handed deployment that still keeps you on the safer side of many local laws, while giving you a deployment speed that hangs with a lot of budget automatics. Enthusiasts who know their mechanisms will appreciate that it’s tuned for a crisp snap rather than a lazy push.

Action and Deployment: Spring Assist Done Right

The flipper tab is generous enough to index under stress without being a pocket snag. A firm, decisive pull starts the blade; the assist kicks in with a clean, audible snap as the liner lock engages. There’s enough detent to prevent accidental opening, but not so much you’re fighting the knife. That balance is what separates a solid assisted opener from the bargain-bin folders that feel mushy or inconsistent.

Jimping along the spine near the base of the blade gives your thumb a positive purchase once open, which matters more than people admit when you’re doing real cutting instead of just flicking for fun.

Blade Geometry and Steel Reality

The blade is a clip point with a slight recurve, giving you a versatile cutting profile. The recurve bites into material when you slice, while the clipped tip keeps things precise enough for detail work. The rainbow finish is applied over standard stainless steel — you’re not getting boutique powder metallurgy at this price point, but you are getting a practical, corrosion-resistant steel that handles routine EDC tasks and sharpens easily on basic stones or a guided system.

This isn’t a safe queen steel; it’s the kind you use, scratch, and tune back up without hesitation.

Visual Heat Meets Everyday Carry Function

The dragon theme isn’t a decal; it’s a sculpted relief along the handle that doubles as grip texture. The curve of the handle flows into a finger ring at the pommel, giving you multiple ways to hold and index the knife. Ringed designs like this are popular in tactical circles for retention, but here it also reinforces the fantasy aesthetic while still serving a purpose in hand.

The rainbow finish runs from blade to handle hardware, so it presents as a unified piece on the counter or in a display. Collectors who curate color-forward or fantasy-inspired EDC setups will immediately see where this fits in.

Pocket Clip and Carry Profile

A sturdy pocket clip anchors the knife for tip-down carry. It rides at a reasonable depth — not full deep carry, but low enough that it doesn’t scream from the pocket while still giving you enough handle to grab quickly. Combined with the ringed pommel, you can index and deploy this knife on the draw without fumbling for orientation.

Closed, it’s compact enough for jeans-pocket carry while still giving you hand-filling ergonomics once open. That’s the sweet spot for an EDC that sees actual use.

How It Compares to an Automatic Knife for Sale, OTF, or Switchblade

Knife buyers searching automatic knives for sale, OTFs, and switchblades all tend to converge on one point: deployment obsession. Here’s where this assisted opener stands in that ecosystem without pretending to be something it isn’t.

  • Versus automatics: A true automatic knife fires from a closed, locked position with a button. This assisted opening knife requires manual start via the flipper, then the spring takes over. In hand, the speed feels close, but the mechanism is mechanically and legally distinct in many regions.
  • Versus OTF knives: An OTF (out-the-front) automatic has the blade travel linearly out of the handle, often with double-action (open/close) via a slider. This is a side-opening folder with a pivot and liner lock. Completely different geometry and internal engineering.
  • Versus classic switchblades: In common language, “switchblade” usually refers to traditional side-opening automatics with button release. This piece sticks to assisted opening, which keeps the collector flash without fully crossing into that category.

For enthusiasts who want some of the same fast-action satisfaction as an automatic knife for sale but either can’t or don’t want to navigate full automatic laws, a well-tuned assisted opener like this is the pragmatic middle ground.

Legal Context: Where Assisted Openers Usually Stand

Legal clarity matters as much as action quality. Under U.S. federal law, spring-assisted knives like this are generally treated differently from true automatic knives, because they require manual pressure on a flipper or thumb stud to begin opening before any spring engages. However, states and even cities can define things more tightly.

Many jurisdictions that restrict automatic knives or switchblades still allow assisted opening folders, but there are exceptions. Blade length limits, carry restrictions (especially concealed carry), and local definitions of "automatic" can all impact whether this knife is legal to carry.

Bottom line: this is an assisted opening knife, not an automatic, OTF, or traditional switchblade. That usually works in your favor legally, but you still need to check your specific state and local laws before you buy or carry.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., federal law (the Switchblade Act) restricts interstate commerce in automatic knives but carves out exceptions for law enforcement, military, and one-handed opening folders that require manual pressure before any spring engages. Actual carry legality is largely a state and local issue. Some states fully allow automatic knives; others limit blade length, restrict concealed carry, or ban automatics and switchblades outright.

This Dragon Tempest concept is a spring-assisted folder, not a true automatic knife. In many states, assisted openers are legal where automatics are restricted, but you must verify your own state and municipal regulations before carrying.

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

Mechanically:

  • Automatic knife: Side-opener where a button or lever releases a spring-driven blade from fully closed to fully open.
  • OTF (out-the-front) knife: Automatic where the blade travels straight out of the handle, usually via a thumb slider; many are double-action, meaning the same control opens and closes the blade.
  • Switchblade: Legally and colloquially, usually the same as an automatic knife — a spring-driven blade that opens with a button or similar control.

This knife is none of those. It’s spring-assisted: you start opening the blade with a flipper tab, and only after you overcome the detent does the spring assist drive the blade to lockup. That distinction is crucial for both mechanics and law.

What makes this assisted opening knife worth buying?

Three things: action, design, and carry reality. The assist is tuned for a clean, decisive snap rather than a half-hearted glide, giving you deployment that feels satisfying every time. The full rainbow finish and sculpted dragon relief move it out of the commodity assisted market and into something people remember when they see it on the counter.

Add the ringed pommel for indexing and retention, a practical clip point blade that actually cuts, and a pocket clip that makes everyday carry realistic, and you’ve got a fantasy-forward knife that still earns its spot in a rotation built around performance.

For Collectors Who Know the Difference – Even When They Buy Automatic Knife Alternatives

If you’re the kind of buyer who searches every automatic knife for sale but still respects a well-executed assisted opener, this dragon fits your lane. It’s loud in color, precise enough in action, and honest about what it is mechanically.

Whether it rides next to your automatics, OTFs, and classic switchblades, or becomes the standout EDC you reach for when you want a little spectacle with your cutting, this piece rewards the enthusiast who chooses gear with both head and heart.

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