Rogue Contract Quick-Strike Automatic Knife - Black Mercenary
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This automatic knife for sale is a California-legal side-opener with real attitude. The Rogue Contract Quick-Strike runs a crisp push-button action that snaps the 1.75-inch black blade into lockup without hesitation, staying under that sub-2-inch California threshold. Aluminum scales carry full mercenary comic artwork from blade tip to butt, turning a compact auto into a pocket-size statement piece. Deep-carry clip, jimped spine, and lanyard hole make it easy to live with; the art and action make it hard to put down.
Automatic Knife for Sale with California-Aware Attitude
If you’re going to buy an automatic knife, it should earn its pocket space. This one does it by pairing a true push-button auto mechanism with a California-legal blade length and a graphic mercenary theme that looks like it stepped off a comic panel. It’s not pretending to be a hard-use combat folder; it’s a compact, fast, and unapologetically loud automatic built for everyday carry under tight length limits.
The Rogue Contract Quick-Strike is a side-opening automatic knife for sale with a 1.75-inch black blade, tuned to stay under California’s 2-inch auto threshold while still feeling like a real piece of mechanical kit—not a novelty.
Why This Automatic Knife for Sale Feels Better in Hand
Mechanically, this is a straightforward push-button side-opener: press the button, the spring drives the blade out, and a solid lockup snaps into place. What separates a decent automatic from a flea-market rattlebox is the way that action feels. On this knife, the button has a defined take-up and a clean break—no mush, no double-click guessing. The blade rides on a simple pivot, but the tension is dialed so the blade doesn’t bounce off the stop pin or overtravel.
At 5 inches overall and 3.25 inches closed, the frame gives you enough real estate to get a three-finger grip without turning it into a keychain toy. Jimping along the spine gives your thumb something to bite into when you’re actually cutting, not just flicking it open for the hundredth time at your desk.
Push-Button Side-Opening Action, Tuned for Short Blades
Short-blade autos can feel twitchy—too much spring and they slap the stop pin, too little and they feel lazy. This one hits the middle ground: decisive snap, minimal recoil. The button is recessed enough that you’re not popping it accidentally when you pull it from your pocket, but exposed enough that deployment is reliably one-handed, even under light gloves.
Steel and Edge Reality on a Compact Auto
The blade is a plain-edge, straight-profile steel with a black printed finish and mercenary art near the tip. You’re not buying this as a super-steel slicer, you’re buying it as a compact automatic that can actually cut boxes, tape, cord, and daily clutter without babying it. The coating helps keep visual wear down, and the simple grind is easy to touch up on a stone or pull-through sharpener when it starts to drag.
Comic Mercenary Theme: Why Collectors Pay Attention
Automatic knives for sale in this price and size range often blur together—same silhouettes, same anonymous black handles. The mercenary artwork here is the differentiator. You get a full red-suited antihero figure on the aluminum handle and a masked face motif on the blade, tied together with a black-and-red palette that actually reads well at arm’s length.
This is where collector interest kicks in: it’s a themed automatic that still respects mechanical basics. Torx fasteners keep the frame serviceable, the spine jimping gives function to the silhouette, and the deep-carry clip means it rides low even if the art is anything but subtle. For comic and pop-culture fans who also care about action and legality, it hits a very specific, very collectible niche.
Carry and Ergonomics in Real EDC Use
At 5 inches overall, this is firmly in the compact EDC automatic category, not a desk toy. The deep-carry pocket clip tucks the frame low enough that it doesn’t scream for attention. The lanyard hole at the rear lets you add a bead or fob if you like a faster draw or want to lean into the custom look.
For light utility—the stuff most of us really do—this form factor is ideal. The short, straight blade gives you control for detail cuts, opening packaging, or breaking down cardboard without a huge tip hanging past your grip. When closed, it disappears into a fifth pocket or the corner of your main pocket without printing like a full-size tactical folder.
Buying an Automatic Knife: Legal Reality, Especially in California
Whenever you see automatic knives for sale, the legal question isn’t background noise—it’s the main chorus. Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (including side-opening autos and many OTF designs) are regulated primarily in terms of interstate commerce and shipping. Day-to-day carry is determined almost entirely by state and sometimes local law.
California is one of the strictest states on automatic knives: autos with blades 2 inches or longer are heavily restricted for carry. This design sidesteps that problem with a 1.75-inch blade, keeping it on the safe side of that 2-inch line while still giving you a usable edge. That makes it a California-legal automatic knife to carry in terms of blade length, assuming you’re otherwise lawfully allowed to possess knives and not in a restricted location like schools, federal buildings, or certain municipal zones.
As always, laws change and local ordinances can be even tighter than state codes. Treat this as a smart, length-conscious choice—not a legal guarantee. Check your current state and city rules before you clip any automatic knife in your pocket.
What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife
Are automatic knives legal?
In the U.S., automatic knives are legal under federal law to own and use in many contexts, but their manufacture, import, and interstate shipment are regulated. The real deciding factor is state and local law: some states allow autos with almost no restriction, others limit blade length, and a few essentially ban carry altogether. California, for example, allows automatic knives with blades under 2 inches, which is exactly why this knife’s 1.75-inch blade matters.
Before you buy any automatic knife for carry, check both your state statute and your city or county ordinances. What’s legal to own might not be legal to carry concealed, and some areas treat autos differently than manual folders or assisted-openers.
What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?
“Automatic knife” is the broad mechanical category: the blade deploys via a spring when you deliberately activate a button, lever, or similar control. A side-opening automatic—like this one—swings the blade out from the side, pivoting like a standard folder but powered by a spring.
OTF (out-the-front) knives are a specific type of automatic where the blade travels linearly out the front of the handle. Many OTFs are double-action: the same slider both deploys and retracts the blade. A “switchblade” is essentially the older, popular term—often used in statutes—to describe automatic knives in general. Enthusiasts tend to use “automatic” and then specify side-opener or OTF, single-action or double-action, for precision.
What makes this automatic knife worth buying?
Three things: the tuned push-button action, the California-conscious 1.75-inch blade length, and the mercenary art that actually gives it collector presence. You’re not buying a generic black auto; you’re buying a compact, side-opening automatic with a reliable snap, usable ergonomics, and full-coverage artwork that stands out in a tray of anonymous EDC pieces.
If you want a legal-to-carry automatic knife in stricter states, something that still flicks open with real authority, and you like the idea of a comic-antihero theme instead of another sterile tactical clone, this one earns its ride.
For the Enthusiast Who Chooses Their Automatic Knife on Purpose
This isn’t the biggest, sharpest, or most overbuilt automatic knife for sale—and that’s the point. It’s honest about what it is: a compact, California-legal side-opening auto with a clean action and loud, mercenary artwork that turns a tool into a conversation piece.
If you’re the kind of buyer who knows why blade length matters to the law, can tell the difference between a side-opening automatic and a double-action OTF, and still appreciates a knife that makes you grin every time you hit the button, this is the right automatic knife to buy. It’s small, fast, and unapologetically fun—built for the collector who actually carries their collection.
| Blade Length (inches) | 1.75 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 5 |
| Closed Length (inches) | 3.25 |
| Blade Color | Black |
| Blade Finish | Printed |
| Blade Style | Normal Straight |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Blade Material | Steel |
| Handle Finish | Printed |
| Button Type | Push-button |
| Theme | Mercenary |
| Pocket Clip | Yes |