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Reaper Tri-Edge 3-Piece Throwing Star Set - Midnight Black

Price:

9.53


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Grim Balance Tri-Edge Throwing Star Set - Midnight Black

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The Grim Balance Tri-Edge Throwing Star Set in Midnight Black is built for throwers who care about consistency, not gimmicks. Each 3.5-inch star carries a skull-mark reaper motif over a blackout finish, but the real story is the symmetry and weight distribution: three identical leaf-shaped points tuned for repeatable flight. The included sheath keeps all three nested and ready, whether you’re dialing in your backyard practice or adding a serious-looking reaper set to a tactical-themed collection.

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Grim Balance Tri-Edge Throwing Star Set - Midnight Black

The Grim Balance Tri-Edge Throwing Star Set in Midnight Black is for people who actually throw, not just pose. Three identical, 3.5-inch tri-point stars, each with a skull-mark reaper emblem, blackout contrast, and geometry that favors clean, predictable rotation. It looks mean, sure—but the reason this set earns space in a serious collection is simple: balance, repeatability, and a design that flies the way it looks.

Throwing Star Precision for Buyers Who Usually Shop Automatic Knives for Sale

If you’re the kind of buyer who compares lockup, spring tension, and steel when you see an automatic knife for sale, you already understand why balance matters in a throwing star. These tri-edge stars skip finger holes and gimmicks and instead focus on a clean, symmetrical hub with three identical leaf-shaped blades. That symmetry is the throwing-world version of a tuned automatic action: consistent behavior, shot after shot, with no surprises.

Each star shares the same 3.5-inch diameter and weight class, so once you’ve logged a few throws, your muscle memory transfers across the entire set. The blackout aesthetic with stonewashed steel contrast is a bonus—the real win is that these fly with the same predictability you demand from a well-built EDC or tactical automatic.

Design and Balance: Why These Stars Feel Right in the Hand

Look closely and the design choices make sense. The triple-point layout isn’t just for looks; it centralizes mass at the hub and tapers it cleanly out to the points, helping the star rotate around an honest center. The inner curves are smooth and unobstructed, so you can grip near the hub without odd hotspots or edges fighting your release.

The edges themselves are shaped in a leaf profile—broad near the base, narrowing to a sharpened point. That gives you enough surface for a confident pinch or blade grip without overbuilding the mass at the tips. The result is a throw that doesn’t feel nose-heavy or unpredictable. In knife terms, this is the equivalent of a blade with a sensible grind and neutral balance: it does the work without demanding you fight it.

Symmetrical Tri-Edge Geometry

All three arms are mirror-matched, so the star doesn’t care which point hits first. That’s the throwing version of ambidextrous deployment—a design that lets you focus on your release, not your orientation.

Skull-Marked Reaper Aesthetic with Purpose

The reaper emblem and blackout contrast aren’t just surface noise. The darker inlay and lighter steel give your eye clear visual anchors, making it easier to maintain consistent grip reference and rotation tracking as you practice.

Collector Appeal Beyond the Typical Throwing Star Set

Most budget throwing stars are stamped, shiny, and forgettable. This set leans into a cohesive theme—grim reaper iconography, midnight black tones, and a stonewashed steel contrast that looks closer to real-use gear than novelty decor. Laid out on a shelf or mounted in a display, the three identical stars read as a matched set, not random pieces.

For collectors who already own a stable of OTFs, automatics, and the occasional switchblade, these stars scratch a different mechanical itch. You’re not listening for a snap of a coil spring this time—you’re watching rotation and target bite. The same mindset applies: repeatable performance and a design that rewards time spent learning how it behaves.

Carry, Storage, and Training Reality

The included sheath is built to hold all three stars in one compact package. That matters more than most people admit. Loose stars in a bag or drawer get dinged, edges get chewed, and the whole set starts to feel sloppy. A dedicated sheath keeps them nested, accessible, and protected between sessions.

At 3.5 inches in overall diameter, these land in the compact-to-mid range for throwing stars. That size is forgiving for newer throwers and still engaging for experienced hands—big enough for a confident grip, small enough for quick recovery and repeat throws. For backyard target practice, they hit that sweet spot where you can throw for an hour without feeling like you’re wrestling oversized steel.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) primarily restricts interstate commerce and importation of automatic knives, not simple ownership. Where things really get complicated is at the state and sometimes local level. Some states allow automatic knives and switchblades for general carry, some restrict blade length or limit them to law enforcement or military, and a few still prohibit them outright. Before you buy an automatic knife or carry one, you need to check the current laws in your state and city—pay attention to terms like “switchblade,” “automatic,” and “gravity knife,” because different statutes use different definitions. Nothing here is legal advice; always confirm with up-to-date local resources.

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

An automatic knife is any knife where the blade deploys from a closed position using a built-in spring or stored energy, activated by a button, lever, or similar control. A side-opening automatic swings the blade out from the handle’s side, much like a manual folder, but powered by a spring. An OTF (out-the-front) automatic pushes the blade straight out the front of the handle—either single-action (press to deploy, manually retract) or double-action (press to deploy, press again to retract). “Switchblade” is largely a legal and cultural term used in statutes and older writing to refer to automatic knives in general, especially side-openers. All OTFs and side-opening autos can fall under “switchblade” in certain laws, but not every law uses the term consistently.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

This product is a throwing star set, not an automatic knife—but the same buying logic applies. You’re looking for real mechanical competence, not just aggressive styling. Here, that means consistent tri-edge geometry, practical 3.5-inch sizing, and a cohesive design that carries from blade to sheath. The grim reaper theme gives it visual bite, but the balanced rotation and durable finish are what make it worth owning, throwing, and displaying alongside your autos, OTFs, and other tactical gear.

For Enthusiasts Who Care About Mechanics – From Autos to Throwing Steel

If you’re the type who doesn’t click “automatic knives for sale” unless the dealer can talk action, lockup, and design choices, this set will feel familiar in all the right ways. Different tool, same mindset: honest construction, purposeful geometry, and theme that supports the function instead of hiding behind it. Whether it lives next to your favorite double-action OTF or becomes your go-to backyard rotation set, the Grim Balance Tri-Edge Throwing Star Set in Midnight Black earns its place by how it flies, not just how it looks.

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