Skip to Content
Neon Saga Flipper Spring Assisted Knife - Anime Yellow

Price:

6.08


Trailline Grip-Locked Compact Fixed Blade Knife - Green/Black
Trailline Grip-Locked Compact Fixed Blade Knife - Green/Black
2.75 2.75
Silver Streak Precision EDC Spring-Assisted Knife - Stainless Steel
Silver Streak Precision EDC Spring-Assisted Knife - Stainless Steel
5.68 5.68

Neon Frameburst Flipper Assisted Knife - Anime Yellow

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/7228/image_1920?unique=7d4fc63

5 sold in last 24 hours

This spring assisted flipper isn’t pretending to be subtle. The Neon Frameburst snaps open with a decisive, coil-driven assist that feels tuned, not sloppy, throwing a 3.5-inch clip point into play fast and clean. A liner lock, jimped spine, and deep pocket clip make it a legit everyday cutter, while the anime-yellow graphics and white handle panels give it display-case presence. It’s the knife you buy when you want an EDC that actually moves like it looks—fast, bright, and unapologetic.

6.08 6.08 USD 6.08 8.50

PF52B

Not Available For Sale

3 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

You May Also Like These

Anime-Inspired Spring Assisted Knife for Sale with Real EDC Chops

The Neon Frameburst Flipper Assisted Knife - Anime Yellow looks like it fell out of a fight scene, but the mechanics are what make it worth owning. This is a spring assisted flipper, not an automatic knife, OTF, or switchblade. You drive the flipper tab; the internal assist spring takes over and finishes the deployment with authority. That distinction matters to serious buyers—and to how and where you can carry it.

Why This Spring Assisted Knife Belongs Next to Your Automatics

Even if your main interest is hunting down the next automatic knife for sale, a good assisted opener earns pocket time because of how it behaves. The Neon Frameburst runs a flipper tab paired with an assist spring that kicks in about a third of the way through the stroke. There’s no lazy half-open wobble: once you clear the detent, the blade commits and locks up with a clear, mechanical stop in the liner lock.

The 3.5-inch clip point blade hits a sweet EDC length—enough belly and tip for slicing boxes, cutting cord, or food prep in a pinch, without feeling clumsy. The two-tone finish (black upper, silver edge) and yellow flame graphic aren’t just decoration; they give you instant orientation on the edge line and tip when you’re actually cutting.

Action Tuning: What the Spring Assist Actually Feels Like

Action quality is where assisted knives separate into toy and tool. On this piece, the detent is strong enough that you can’t just wrist it open, but not so heavy that you’re fighting the flipper. The assist engages cleanly—no gritty hesitation, no overzealous slam. You get a fast, positive flip that feels closer to a well-tuned production flipper than a generic gas-station knife.

Jimping on the spine near the pivot gives your thumb a natural landing zone for control cuts once the blade is open. Paired with the liner lock, it makes the knife feel secure in use, not just in photos.

Steel and Edge Reality

The blade steel is a workhorse stainless—think corrosion resistance and easy field sharpening over boutique chemistry. This isn’t a safe-queen super steel piece; it’s built to ride in a pocket, see tape, cardboard, and the occasional rope, and then come back to life quickly on a basic stone or ceramic rod. For a knife at this tier, that matters more than chasing a high Rockwell number you’ll never fully use.

Visual Impact Meets Functional EDC Design

On the table, the Neon Frameburst looks like a prop. In hand, it settles into an 8-inch overall package with a 4.5-inch closed length—classic pocket knife proportions that disappear in jeans but fill the hand when you’re cutting. The white handle with anime-yellow diamond inlays and matching tail cap gives you indexed grip points and visual rhythm, not just loud color.

The handle contour stays mostly straight, which collectors know is good news for edge alignment during push cuts. Those striped grooves and contrasting screws aren’t time-wasters: they break up the smooth surface so the knife won’t twist as easily if your hands are wet or slick.

Pocket Clip, Carry, and Balance

The black pocket clip rides the line between discreet and expressive: from a distance, you see hardware and a sliver of white, not a neon billboard. Tension is tuned for repeated draw without shredding pockets, and the 4.5-inch closed length hits that sweet spot where the knife anchors at the seam without printing like a brick.

Balance sits just behind the pivot, which is where a flipper like this should live. It makes the opening motion feel lighter, and once the blade is locked, your grip naturally finds that center for better control on detail work.

Legal Context: Assisted Opener vs Automatic Knife vs Switchblade

If you’re shopping automatic knives for sale, you’re already thinking about laws. This knife intentionally sits in a different legal lane. It is spring assisted, not a fully automatic knife or switchblade. You initiate the blade with manual pressure on the flipper tab; the spring only assists once you’ve started the motion.

Under U.S. federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act), true automatics and many OTF switchblades face shipping and interstate commerce restrictions. Spring assisted knives like this one are generally treated as manual folders because they require continuous manual input to begin opening. That said, state and local laws vary. Some jurisdictions lump assisted openers closer to automatics; others don’t care about the assist as long as there’s a manual start.

The practical takeaway: this design is typically easier to carry legally than a full automatic knife, but you should always check your state and city regulations before clipping it into your pocket.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives and switchblades sit under a federal framework (the Switchblade Knife Act) that mainly governs interstate commerce and shipment, especially over state lines and through the mail. Federal law doesn’t flat-out ban possession for most civilians, but it does restrict how automatics and certain OTF switchblades move in commerce.

The real complexity is at the state and local level. Some states allow automatic knife carry freely, some allow ownership but limit concealed carry, and others heavily restrict or ban automatics and traditional switchblades outright. Spring assisted knives like the Neon Frameburst are usually treated separately, more like regular folding knives, because you must manually start the blade via the flipper tab.

Bottom line: check your specific state and city knife laws before you buy or carry any automatic knife, OTF, or switchblade—and understand that an assisted opener usually offers a safer legal profile.

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

Collectors use these terms precisely:

  • Automatic knife: A folding knife where pressing a button, lever, or hidden release causes the blade to open fully under spring tension. You do not have to start the blade manually.
  • Switchblade: Traditionally, just another term for an automatic knife, especially side-opening autos. In many laws, "switchblade" is the legal term used for what enthusiasts call automatics.
  • OTF (Out-The-Front): A subset of automatic knives where the blade travels in and out of the handle through a front-facing opening. Most modern OTFs are sliding-switch operated and can be single-action (auto out, manual in) or double-action (auto out and auto in).

The Neon Frameburst is none of those. It’s a spring assisted flipper: you push the flipper tab manually, and an assist spring helps finish the opening. That mechanical difference is why it typically faces fewer legal restrictions than a true automatic or switchblade.

What makes this automatic-style assisted knife worth buying?

For the money, it hits the trifecta serious buyers care about: action, usability, and presence. The assist is tuned well enough to satisfy someone who’s already used real automatics, the 3.5-inch clip point blade is a genuinely useful EDC profile, and the anime-yellow styling makes it stand out in a drawer full of black handles and stonewash. It’s the kind of assisted EDC you can flip all day, toss in a collection as a color pop, or hang in a retail case where it will outdraw more subdued pieces.

For Collectors Who Appreciate Mechanism as Much as Style

If you’re the buyer who can tell the difference between a lazy assist and a crisp one, who knows why some states draw lines between automatic knives, OTFs, and assisted folders, this piece is speaking your language. The Neon Frameburst isn’t trying to pretend it’s a customs table auto; it’s an unapologetically bold, spring assisted flipper that earns its pocket time on action and ergonomics, then wins the eye with anime-yellow attitude.

Whether you’re rounding out a collection built around automatic knives for sale, or you just want an EDC that looks like motion frozen mid-frame, this is the right kind of loud—mechanically sound first, visually wild second.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Themed
Theme Anime
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock