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Raiders of the North Viking Sword Display Blade - Black and Gold

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40.91


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North Sea Raider Viking Sword - Black and Gold

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This North Sea Raider Viking Sword balances historical presence with everyday practicality. At 36.5" overall, it carries the classic straight, double-edged Viking profile with a rounded point and a clean satin-finish blade. The black segmented grip, curved gold-tone guard, and shell pommel hit that recognizable Norse silhouette without drifting into cartoon fantasy. A matching black scabbard with gold accents finishes the package, ready for wall display, costume work, or reenactment rigs where a full-length Viking sword simply looks right.

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SW910887

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North Sea Raider Viking Sword – Historical Presence without the Drama

You don’t buy a Viking sword because you need another wall hanger. You buy one because a specific silhouette won’t leave your head: straight double edge, no nonsense fuller, simple guard, and a pommel that looks like it could have come off a longship somewhere in the North Sea. This North Sea Raider Viking Sword hits that profile cleanly — 36.5" overall, black-and-gold hardware, and a matching scabbard that looks finished right out of the box.

Viking Sword for Sale with a Clean, Recognizable Silhouette

When you’re looking for a Viking sword for sale, you’re really hunting for proportions. This piece keeps the classic long, straight, double-edged blade with a rounded point, avoiding the overbuilt fantasy spikes that ruin a lot of replicas. The satin-finished silver blade runs the visual show, anchored by a curved gold-tone crossguard and a shell-style pommel that immediately telegraph historical Norse influence.

The segmented black grip gives you obvious index points for the hand and breaks up the hilt visually without noisy engraving. Then the scabbard closes the loop: black body, gold throat, and gold tip that echo the guard and pommel so the whole package reads as one complete sword, not a random blade stuffed into a generic sheath.

Blade, Hilt, and Balance – How the Design Actually Works in Hand

This isn’t a fencing trainer or a cutting competition blade; it’s a Viking-style display and costume sword designed to look right and handle reasonably for light duty. The straight double-edged blade and rounded point push it toward safe handling for staged work and cosplay compared to sharper, needle-point builds. The long blade establishes that proper Viking presence across the belt or on the wall.

Double-Edged Blade with a Rounded Point

The double-edged configuration is what makes this convincingly Norse. Both edges run relatively parallel, maintaining blade width rather than tapering aggressively like a later arming sword. The point is rounded rather than acute, which makes this a better fit for costume, convention, or display environments where you want the look of a Viking sword without a truly piercing tip causing trouble.

Curved Crossguard and Shell Pommel Details

The curved crossguard does two jobs. Visually, that gentle sweep outward softens the transition from blade to grip the way you see on later-period interpretations of Viking-era blades, especially in film and stage work. Functionally, it still gives your hand a defined stop so you can plant behind the guard for basic handling drills or staged movement.

The shell-shaped pommel is the other anchor point. Instead of a plain disc or heavy multi-lobed block, you get a fan-like pommel that flashes gold at the end of the hilt. It’s big enough to serve as a counterpoint to the blade visually, tying the scabbard fittings and guard together, and it gives your off-hand a clear index if you ever use a two-handed grip for theatrical swings.

Viking Sword for Sale with Matching Scabbard and Display Potential

A lot of budget historical replicas fall apart the second you look at the scabbard. Here, the black scabbard with gold throat and chape keeps the story straight — literally. The scabbard track follows the blade line cleanly, so when the sword is sheathed, the black body becomes the negative space that lets the gold accents and hilt pop against a wall or costume rig.

For display, that means you can mount the set horizontally or vertically and still get a coherent visual: gold at the guard, gold at the throat, blade line implied by the black scabbard, then gold at the tip to finish the run. For cosplay or reenactment-inspired kits, the full-length scabbard keeps your rig from looking improvised or unfinished, which is where a lot of cheap swords fail.

How This Viking Sword Fits Your Collection or Kit

If you collect blades, you already know swords live on a different part of the wall than your automatic knives, OTFs, and switchblades. This Viking sword fills the historical-Norse slot in a collection without demanding custom-sword money. It’s visually honest: no laser dragons, no fake runes scrawled down the fuller, just a clean, straight double edge with black-and-gold furniture that looks at home next to other European-inspired pieces.

For stage, costume, or casual reenactment, that accessibility matters. You get the instant recognition of a Viking profile from anyone in the audience, plus a rounded point that keeps it on the safer end of the prop spectrum, depending on how you manage sharpening. The overall length around 36.5" makes it manageable for most users; long enough to read as a real weapon, short enough not to become unwieldy in cramped convention spaces.

Legal and Practical Notes on Owning a Viking Sword

Swords live in a different legal world than an automatic knife, OTF, or switchblade. In most places, a full-length sword like this is treated as a large fixed blade or collectible weapon. That usually means it’s fine to own at home for display or collection, but carrying it in public can be restricted or banned outright, depending on local law.

Unlike an automatic knife, which often has specific switchblade or assisted-opening statutes tied to its mechanism, a sword is generally regulated by length and context rather than deployment method. It won’t fall under federal switchblade laws in the U.S., but your state or city may still have rules about open carry of large blades, costuming in public spaces, or transporting weapons in vehicles. If you’re planning to wear this Viking sword to events, check your local and venue regulations first and transport it responsibly.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Federal U.S. law (the Switchblade Act) mainly controls interstate commerce and mailing of automatic knives, especially across state lines and via USPS. It doesn’t flat-out ban owning an automatic knife, OTF, or switchblade. The real rules live at the state and even city level: some states allow automatic knives and OTFs for everyday carry, some allow ownership but restrict carry, and a few still prohibit them altogether. Before you buy an automatic knife for sale online, check your state statutes and any local ordinances. Also pay attention to blade length limits, where carry is allowed (concealed vs. open), and whether there are exceptions for law enforcement, military, or first responders.

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

Mechanically, an automatic knife is any knife where the blade opens under spring pressure when you hit a button, bolster, or lever — you don’t help the blade out manually like a flipper or assisted folder. An OTF (out-the-front) is a specific type of automatic where the blade travels straight out of the front of the handle, instead of pivoting from the side like a classic side-opening auto. “Switchblade” is the legal and cultural term often used for side-opening automatics and sometimes OTFs, especially in statutes and older literature. Enthusiasts usually distinguish them by mechanism: automatic (overall category), side-opening automatic, and OTF automatic, with further splits into single-action and double-action OTF designs.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

When you evaluate an automatic knife, you judge it by how cleanly it deploys, how solid lockup feels, and whether the blade steel and grind match how you’ll actually use it. A good automatic knife snaps open with authority but without gritty resistance, seats firmly with minimal play, and uses a steel and heat treat that hold an edge under the kind of cutting you really do — boxes, straps, light utility, or defensive carry. Hardware, clip design, and ergonomics matter just as much: you want screws that don’t strip, a clip that disappears in the pocket without hot spots, and a handle that anchors the knife during deployment. The automatic knife that’s worth buying is the one that pairs a reliable mechanism with honest materials and a form factor you’ll actually carry.

Where This Viking Sword Belongs in a Serious Enthusiast’s World

If your gear drawer is already full of automatic knives, OTFs, and the occasional switchblade, this North Sea Raider Viking Sword is the natural step onto the long steel side of the hobby. It won’t replace your EDC; it doesn’t have a deployment button or double-action mechanism to obsess over. What it does have is that instantly recognizable Viking profile, a cohesive black-and-gold presentation with a proper scabbard, and the kind of wall or costume presence that reminds you why edged weapons grabbed you in the first place.

Whether it ends up hanging above your workbench, riding on a reenactment belt, or rounding out the historical corner of your collection, it’s a straightforward, minimalist Viking sword for sale that does exactly what it should: look right, handle reasonably, and put that longship-era silhouette in your hands without any unnecessary drama.

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