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Green-Eyed Reaper Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull

Price:

2.33


Cosmic Disguise Karambit Comb Knife - Galaxy Purple
Cosmic Disguise Karambit Comb Knife - Galaxy Purple
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Pin-Dot Phantom Covert Comb Knife - Black Polka Dot
Pin-Dot Phantom Covert Comb Knife - Black Polka Dot
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Reaper Reveal Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull

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This isn’t your average disguised blade. The Reaper Reveal Karambit Comb Knife hides a hawkbill-style knife inside a full-size comb body, wrapped in a black skull graphic with eerie green eyes. The karambit-style finger ring gives you locked-in control the moment you draw, while the lightweight build rides pocket-easy. For collectors and EDC fans who like their hidden knives to actually cut, this is a functional comb knife with a reveal that never gets old.

2.33 2.33 USD 2.33

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Handle Finish
  • Concealed Length (inches)
  • Concealment Type

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The Reaper Reveal Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull is what happens when a disguised knife is built for people who actually use their gear. This is a comb knife that hides a curved hawkbill blade and a karambit-style finger ring inside a skull-covered shell, then executes the whole package light and slim enough for real pocket carry. It’s a hidden knife first, a visual hook second, and a throwaway novelty never.

Comb Knife for Sale with a Karambit Attitude

If you’re looking for an automatic knife for sale, you already know how much action and mechanism matter. This comb knife isn’t automatic, but it lives in the same enthusiast ecosystem: gear that rewards fidget factor, control, and a clean deployment. Here, the story is about disguise and grip. The detachable comb cover sheathes the blade until you slide it off, then the karambit-style ring indexes your hand instantly. It’s a hidden knife that behaves like a compact fixed hawkbill once it’s in your grip.

At 7.5 inches overall with a 3-inch black hawkbill blade and 4.5-inch closed length, you get full cutting geometry in a footprint that disappears in a pocket, pack, or display tray. The black blade, glossy skull graphic, and green-eye accents pull eyes from across the room—exactly what you want if you’re merchandising this alongside your automatic knives for sale and OTF pieces.

Disguised Edge: How the Comb Cover and Ring Work Together

Mechanically, the Reaper Reveal is straightforward: no springs, no button, no automatic deployment. The blade stays concealed under the comb cover until you slide or pull the cover clear. From there, the karambit-style ring takes over, giving you a locked-in grip that’s worlds beyond a basic straight comb knife handle.

Hawkbill Geometry Built for Draw Cuts

The hawkbill profile is the star of the cutting equation. Instead of asking the edge to push-cut like a traditional straight EDC, this blade wants to hook and pull. That makes it ideal for controlled slicing: zip ties, tape, packaging, or any material where you want the edge to bite and stay engaged. The belly of the curve keeps material in the cut path, rather than letting it skate off the edge.

The black finish on the blade does more than just match the skull motif. A darker blade reduces glare under bright lighting—helpful in retail displays and outdoor carry—and visually compresses the profile so the reveal from comb to blade feels more dramatic.

Karambit-Style Ring for Locked-In Control

The finger ring is what separates this from generic disguised knives. Once your finger is through, you’ve got rotational control and retention you simply don’t get from a straight, slipperier profile. That matters when you’re demoing the knife for a customer or working around awkward angles. The ring acts like an instant index point: you know exactly where the edge is, and it’s not leaving your hand unless you want it to.

Why This Hidden Knife Earns Its Place Next to Your Automatics

Serious buyers who come in to buy automatic knives, OTF models, or even switchblade-style collectibles are already tuned into mechanisms and reveals. This comb knife taps into that same mindset with a different story: no button-driven action, but a transformation from innocuous comb to hawkbill talon that plays just as well in hand or on camera.

At only 1.16 ounces, it carries lighter than most compact folders. The slim profile slides into a pocket, bag, or organizer without bulking up your kit. For retailers, that featherweight mass means easy peg-hook or tray display and zero headaches when you’re handling a stack of them during busy runs.

The graphic work is pure shelf appeal: a full skull pattern, green eyes glowing against a dark field, and consistent art across handle and comb cover. In a case full of matte black EDC and stonewashed automatic knives for sale, this is the piece that visually breaks the grid and pulls the conversation toward your hidden knives category.

Mechanics vs. Automatics: Where This Comb Knife Fits

This is not an automatic knife, not an OTF, and not a switchblade. There’s no spring assist and no button-fired action. Instead, the mechanical interest comes from the reveal: comb to blade, neutral handle to indexed karambit-style grip. If you already own a double-action automatic or a side-opening automatic knife, this rides alongside as the "hidden in plain sight" member of the rotation.

Collector Value: Disguised Form, Recognizable Function

Collectors appreciate when a piece commits to its concept. Here, the disguise isn’t a gimmick slapped on after the fact. The comb cover acts as both visual misdirection and a sheath-like guard, and the skull motif runs continuous across both pieces so it reads as a single object until you break it apart. The moment you reveal the blade, the karambit cues—ring, curve, point orientation—immediately tell an enthusiast what the edge wants to do.

That dual identity is what makes it display-worthy: comb one second, hawkbill karambit-inspired knife the next. In a collection that already has the usual lineup of side-open automatics, OTF double actions, and classic Italian-style switchblades, this fills the "disguised oddball that still cuts" slot.

Legal Context: Disguised Knives, Automatic Laws, and Common Sense

Any time you’re buying gear in the same case as an automatic knife for sale, you should be thinking about local laws. While this Reaper Reveal Comb Knife is not an automatic knife and not an OTF, it is a disguised knife—designed to look like a comb at first glance. In many jurisdictions, disguised knives are regulated separately from standard folding or fixed blades.

In the United States, federal law focuses mainly on interstate commerce of automatic knives (what most non-enthusiasts call switchblades). That framework doesn’t automatically make a comb knife illegal, but states and cities can—and do—go further. Some regions have specific language about disguised knives (comb knives, cane swords, belt buckle knives, etc.), and others simply apply their existing concealed carry or blade length limits.

The responsible move is simple: check your state and local regulations before you carry any hidden knife, just as you would before you buy an automatic knife or OTF for EDC. Owning a disguised knife for collection is often treated differently than carrying it in public. Know how your area draws that line and stay on the right side of it.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives (and what many call switchblades) are governed by both federal and state law. Federally, the Switchblade Knife Act restricts interstate shipment of automatic knives with a push-button or similar mechanism that opens the blade automatically. There are exceptions for military, law enforcement, and some commercial channels, but that’s the baseline. State and local laws vary widely: some states allow automatic knives for sale and carry with few restrictions, others allow possession but not carry, and a few still prohibit them outright. Always confirm your specific state and city rules before you buy automatic knife models for EDC, and treat disguised knives—like comb knives—with the same level of caution.

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

Mechanically, an automatic knife is any knife where a spring opens the blade fully when you press a button, lever, or similar control. Most side-opening autos fall here. An OTF (out-the-front) automatic is a subcategory: the blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle, either single-action (spring deploy, manual retract) or double-action (spring deploy and retract). "Switchblade" is historically the catch-all term for automatic knives in older laws and public conversation, but enthusiasts usually reserve it for classic side-opening autos. This Reaper Reveal Comb Knife is none of the above—it’s a manual, disguised comb knife with no spring-driven action.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Applied to this specific piece, the better question is: what makes this hidden knife worth buying alongside your automatics? You’re getting a 3-inch hawkbill-style blade with real draw-cut utility, a karambit-style ring for secure, indexed handling, and a full comb disguise that actually passes the glance test. The skull-and-green-eye graphic gives you immediate display impact, and the 1.16-ounce weight keeps it practical for pocket or pack carry. It’s the kind of piece that sits next to your automatic knives for sale and reliably pulls questions, demos, and impulse buys.

Finish the Rotation with a Hidden Knife That Actually Cuts

If your collection is already stacked with an automatic knife for sale in every flavor—side-open autos, OTF double-actions, classic switchblade patterns—this Reaper Reveal Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull fills a different niche. It’s the disguised, skull-covered hawkbill that goes from comb to claw in one motion, with a ring that keeps it locked in your hand and a profile that rides lighter than most folders. For the buyer who cares about mechanics, grip, and story—not just surface-level flash—this hidden knife earns its place next to your favorite automatics and OTFs.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 1.16
Blade Color Black
Handle Finish Glossy
Concealed Length (inches) 4.5
Concealment Type Comb