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Dragon-Scale Quick-Strike Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black

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8.09


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Dragon Ember Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Gold Blade
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Dragon Spine Rapid-Deploy Tanto Spring Assisted Knife - Stonewash Steel
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Midnight Dragon Tactical Assisted Knife - Matte Black

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This isn’t an automatic knife; it’s a spring-assisted folder built for fast, one-handed work. The Midnight Dragon Tactical Assisted Knife pairs a matte black 440 stainless American tanto blade with a flipper tab and tuned spring that snaps it into lockup with authority. Dragon-scale texturing along the spine and raised dragon artwork in the handle give real traction, not just fantasy flair. At 3.75 inches of cutting edge and a secure liner lock, it’s a serious EDC choice for buyers who care how a knife actually runs.

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A134SB

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Handle Finish
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Automatic Knives for Sale vs. Serious Spring Assist: Where This Dragon Belongs

If you're hunting for an automatic knife for sale, you already know the difference between real action and gimmick hardware. This piece looks like it could be a switchblade, but let’s be precise: the Midnight Dragon is a spring-assisted folding knife, not a true automatic knife. That matters. You start the motion with the flipper tab, the internal spring takes over, and the blade snaps into a clean liner lock with satisfying, controlled speed.

Where a double-action OTF spits a blade straight out the front, this knife runs a side-folding American tanto in 440 stainless, tuned for repeatable, one-handed deployment. It belongs in the same conversation as the best EDC folders, with the added speed edge that spring assist brings to the party.

Buy Automatic Knife-Level Performance in a Spring-Assisted Dragon EDC

When people go to buy automatic knife setups for daily carry, they’re usually after one thing: fast, reliable deployment with one hand. This spring-assisted dragon delivers that feel while sidestepping some of the legal headaches attached to full automatics and switchblades.

The flipper tab is shaped and positioned so that a straight, forward press from your index finger loads the torsion spring smoothly. There’s no gritty ramp-up, no awkward break. It moves, then it’s open. The liner lock engages positively, with enough tang contact that you don’t have to baby it under real cutting load. It’s the kind of action you can cycle a hundred times at the desk without it feeling loose or cheap.

Action, Steel, and Geometry: Why This Knife Feels Faster Than Its Price

Collectors don’t fall for vague “fast action” claims. They feel the pivot, listen for lockup, and look at geometry. This dragon-themed spring assist delivers in the details.

Spring-Assisted Deployment That Snaps, Not Slaps

The deployment system uses a flipper tab leveraged close to the pivot, giving you excellent mechanical advantage. You provide the initiation; the internal spring finishes with a crisp, decisive snap. Unlike some over-torqued budget assists that slam the blade and bounce the lock, this one strikes a balance: enough speed to feel intentional, controlled enough to keep lockup consistent and fingers safe.

Thumb jimping on the spine near the pivot gives your forward grip a secure anchor once the blade is open. That’s not decoration. Jimping that close to the pivot is about controlling precise cuts and hard stabs with the American tanto point.

440 Stainless and the American Tanto Edge

The 3.75-inch blade is 440 stainless steel, the workhorse choice in this price class. Is it boutique powdered steel? No. But 440, properly heat-treated, brings corrosion resistance, easy field sharpening, and acceptable edge retention for real EDC use. You’ll touch it up more often than a premium steel, but you’ll do it quickly on basic stones or a pocket sharpener.

The American tanto profile is where this knife quietly earns its keep. You get two working edges: the primary straight cutting edge for push cuts and slicing, and the secondary reinforced tip for piercing, scraping, and detailed utility work. On an assisted opener, a strong point matters—there’s no sense in fast deployment if the tip folds the first time you lever under something stubborn.

Automatic Knives for Sale, Dragon-Themed: Why This One Stands Out

Search automatic knives for sale and you’ll drown in fantasy pieces that never leave a shelf. This dragon, by contrast, is dressed for myth but built for pocket time. The handle is steel with a matte black finish, carrying a raised dragon motif that’s more than just artwork. Those scales and contours give tactile indexing so you can grab the knife in the dark and know instantly which way is forward.

Dragon-Scale Grip and Real-World Carry

At 8.5 inches overall and 4.75 closed, it rides right in the tactical EDC sweet spot—enough handle to fill the hand, not so much length that it becomes a brick in the pocket. The slim, straight handle profile helps it disappear along the seam of your jeans or inside a pack divider.

The pocket clip is set up for tip-down carry, with a lanyard hole at the butt for those who like a pull-tab or fob. Combined with the spring-assisted flipper, that means you can draw, index, and open with the same fluid motion you’d expect from a solid automatic knife, just with more mechanical control in your hand.

Legal Context: When a Spring-Assisted Knife Beats an Automatic Knife for Sale

Here’s where mechanism matters more than marketing. In a lot of U.S. jurisdictions, a true automatic knife or switchblade—press a button, blade opens with no assist from the user—still faces restrictions on carry or sale. Spring-assisted knives operate differently: you must start the blade’s movement manually using a flipper or thumb stud before the spring engages.

Many states treat spring-assisted knives more favorably than full automatics, making them easier to carry daily. That doesn’t mean you get a free pass. Laws vary widely by state and sometimes by city. Blade length, locking mechanism, and how the law defines a “switchblade” or “automatic knife” all come into play. This dragon is designed to give you automatic-like deployment speed in a format that, in many regions, is more likely to be legal to carry—but it’s your responsibility to confirm the rules where you live.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Under U.S. federal law (the Federal Switchblade Act), automatic knives and classic switchblades are mainly restricted in interstate commerce and importation, with specific exemptions for military and some government uses. The real story is at the state and local level: some states now allow automatic knives for everyday carry, some limit blade length, and some still ban them outright.

This knife is spring-assisted, not a true automatic knife, which often places it in a different legal category with fewer restrictions. Still, statutes change, and there’s no universal rule. Before you buy or carry any automatic knife, OTF, switchblade, or assisted opener, check your state and city laws—or talk to a knowledgeable local dealer or attorney.

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

Mechanically, an automatic knife opens its blade fully with a button, slide, or similar control—once you activate it, the internal spring does all the work. A switchblade is essentially the same thing; it’s the traditional and legal term used in many statutes for side-opening automatics.

OTF (out-the-front) knives are a specific subtype where the blade travels straight out of the front of the handle instead of pivoting from the side. Most modern OTFs are automatic and often double-action: the same control sends the blade out and pulls it back in. By contrast, this dragon is neither automatic nor OTF; it’s a side-folding, spring-assisted knife. You start the blade with the flipper, then the spring finishes the deployment into a liner lock.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Strictly speaking, this isn’t a true automatic knife, but it competes in the same headspace for buyers chasing fast deployment. It’s worth buying because it combines a tuned spring-assisted action, an American tanto 440 stainless blade, and a dragon-scale steel handle into a cohesive, carry-ready package.

You’re not paying for a wall-hanger. You’re paying for a knife you’ll actually clip to your pocket: 3.75 inches of usable edge, confident liner lock, one-handed flipper deployment, and a themed design that still respects real ergonomics. For the collector, it’s an affordable dragon-themed tactical piece that you can actually use; for the EDC buyer, it’s a way to get near-automatic speed without jumping all the way into switchblade territory.

For Enthusiasts Who Choose Their Edge on Purpose

Plenty of automatic knives for sale will shout louder than this one; few at this tier are as honest about what they are: a well-tuned spring-assisted EDC with a dragon-themed, matte black profile and a blade that’s ready to work. If you’re the kind of buyer who cares about action, lockup, and geometry more than hype, this knife fits your pocket and your standards. It looks like myth. It runs like a tool. And that’s exactly the point.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 440 stainless steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Steel
Theme Dragon
Safety Liner lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock