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Super Saiyan Surge Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Orange

Price:

6.29


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Kitty Heart Quick-Flip Assisted Opening Knife - Pink Blade
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Saiyan Surge Anime-Assisted EDC Knife - Orange Blade

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This isn’t a toy, it’s a spring-assisted EDC with anime voltage. The Saiyan Surge Anime-Assisted EDC Knife pairs a matte orange 3.25" 440C stainless clip point with tuned assisted action off the flipper tab for fast, decisive deployment. Printed aluminum scales showcase full-character anime artwork, backed by a solid liner lock and pocket clip. At 8" overall, it carries like a real working folder while doubling as a loud, unapologetic fandom piece in your rotation.

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A127DBOR

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Spring-Assisted Anime EDC Knife for Sale with Real Mechanical Cred

The Saiyan Surge Anime-Assisted EDC Knife - Orange Blade is what happens when a fast spring-assisted folder collides with full-send anime artwork. Under the loud graphics and orange steel, this is still a legitimate everyday carry knife: 3.25" 440C stainless clip point, tuned assisted mechanism off a flipper tab, and a liner lock that actually holds. If you want a knife that hits like a fandom piece but behaves like an EDC, this is the lane.

Why This Assisted Knife Belongs Next to Your Automatic Knife for Sale Shortlist

Serious buyers know the difference between an assisted opening knife and an automatic knife for sale. This one is assisted: you start the blade with the flipper, the spring does the rest. That matters for two reasons. First, the action has a snappy, confident feel without the hard kick of a coil-driven automatic or double action OTF. Second, in a lot of jurisdictions it’s treated differently than a true automatic or switchblade, which makes it a smarter carry when laws get gray.

Mechanically, this knife is built around a familiar formula that works: 440C stainless clip point, matte finish to cut glare, and a pivot tuned for positive, reliable deployment. The assisted action isn’t just “fast for the price,” it’s the kind of crisp snap that makes you flick it open a few extra times at the table just because the detent and spring timing feel right.

Mechanics First: Action, Steel, and Everyday Carry Reality

If you’re the buyer who checks pivot feel before you even look at the graphics, this section is for you. The deployment on this knife is spring-assisted via a flipper tab. That means no thumb stud fumbling, no nail nick nonsense. You load the detent with light finger pressure, the spring takes over, and the blade tracks straight into lockup. For someone used to a good automatic knife, the feel here is familiar—just with you initiating the first quarter of travel.

440C Stainless Clip Point That Actually Works

440C stainless has been around long enough to be boring to marketers and respected by people who cut things. Properly heat treated, it delivers solid edge retention, good toughness for an EDC folder, and corrosion resistance that doesn’t fall apart the first time it sees sweat or a wet cardboard box. On a budget-friendly assisted knife like this, 440C is the smart play: easy to touch up, forgiving if you’re rough on your tools, and still sharp enough to slice clean when you keep it maintained.

EDC Dimensions That Make Sense in Pocket

Specs matter. At 3.25" of blade and 8" overall, this knife sits right in the daily carry sweet spot. The closed length of 4.58" and a weight of 4.67 oz give it a reassuring in-hand presence without dragging your pocket down like a brick. The clip point profile gives you a strong tip for detail work, with enough belly for slicing tasks. Spine jimping near the handle lets your thumb lock in for controlled cuts instead of skating around on smooth steel.

Anime Collector Energy Meets Real-Use Spring-Assisted Folder

You don’t buy this knife because you want it to disappear. You buy it because the handle art and orange blade announce exactly what you’re into. The white printed aluminum scales carry a full Super Saiyan-style anime hero in mid-power-up, complete with dynamic pose and high-contrast colors that pop from across a display case.

On the blade, a white circular kanji-style emblem ties the visual story together. It’s not just slapped-on print; the motif follows the classic martial arts and anime iconography playbook—symbol on the weapon, character on the handle. For collectors, that cohesion is what takes it from “random graphic knife” to a piece that earns space on a shelf or in a themed tray.

Aluminum Scales, Printed Right

Printed aluminum handles do two things: they carry artwork cleanly, and they keep weight manageable. Aluminum gives you enough rigidity that the liner lock has a stable platform, and the print process here keeps edges sharp and colors vibrant instead of muddy. For an anime knife, that matters—if the linework and color blocking are off, the whole theme falls apart. Here, the hero art is the first thing you see and the last thing you forget.

Assisted vs Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade: Where This Knife Fits

Collectors who spend time around automatic knives for sale care about distinctions, not marketing blur. This is an assisted opening folding knife, not an automatic, not an OTF, and not a traditional switchblade. The spring only takes over once you manually start the blade. With an automatic knife or switchblade, a button or hidden release sends the blade out under full spring tension with no ongoing input. With an OTF, the blade tracks in or out through the front of the handle, often via a slider, and many are double action (open and close off the same control).

This folder rides on the side-opening pattern: standard pivot, liner lock, and a spring to help once you do your part. For buyers who own full autos and OTFs, that difference is obvious in hand—but it’s also important when you’re deciding which knife to clip on in a jurisdiction that splits hairs over “automatic” vs “assisted.”

Legal Context: Smarter Carry Than a True Automatic Knife in Many States

Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives and classic switchblades are regulated under the Federal Switchblade Act, especially when it comes to interstate commerce and shipping across state lines. Assisted opening knives like this are generally treated differently because they require manual initiation to start the blade moving. That said, states and even cities layer their own rules on top.

Many states that heavily restrict an automatic knife for sale or switchblade still allow assisted opening folders for everyday carry, particularly when the blade stays under a certain length. At 3.25", this knife fits under the common 3"–4" EDC thresholds used in a lot of local codes. But — and this is non-negotiable — it’s on you to check your state and local laws before carry. The smart move is to treat legality the same way you treat lockup and steel: verify, don’t assume.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives (including many side-opening autos and OTF switchblades) are controlled by the Federal Switchblade Act for interstate sale and shipping. That law doesn’t outright ban ownership but does restrict how automatic knives for sale move across state lines and into certain jurisdictions. Beyond that, each state—and often individual cities—sets its own rules about owning, carrying, blade length, opening method, and where you can bring them.

This knife is spring-assisted, not a true automatic, so it’s generally treated more leniently than a full auto or switchblade. Still, some places write their laws broadly enough that any spring involvement can trigger restrictions. Before you buy or carry, read your state statutes and, if needed, talk to someone who actually follows local knife law—not just rumor in a forum thread.

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

Functionally, “automatic knife” and “switchblade” usually describe the same broad category: a knife where you press a button, lever, or hidden mechanism and the blade deploys under full spring power with no continued manual input. Most side-opening autos and classic push-button knives fall under that umbrella.

OTF (“out-the-front”) refers to how the blade travels: straight out of the front of the handle instead of swinging out from the side. OTFs can be automatic (single or double action) or manual, but when buyers say OTF, they usually mean a double action automatic knife that fires and retracts from a slider. This Saiyan Surge is neither; it’s an assisted opening folder. You move the flipper, the spring helps finish the job. For collectors, that distinction matters the same way steel choice or grind matters—it’s part of the story of the knife.

What makes this assisted knife worth buying?

You’re not paying for mystery steel and limp action wrapped in generic “tactical” talk. You’re getting a 440C stainless clip point with real-world edge behavior, a spring-assisted deployment that snaps into liner lock with purpose, and a pocket clip that makes this a viable daily carry—not just wall art. Add in the anime-forward design, the orange blade with kanji emblem, and the clean printed aluminum scales, and you’ve got a piece that lives two lives: fan collectible on the shelf, functional EDC in the pocket.

For a buyer who already owns a few automatic knives for sale from the usual suspects, this isn’t trying to replace a high-end auto. It’s adding a different note to the lineup: pop-culture loud, mechanically honest, and unapologetically fun to flick open.

For Enthusiasts Who Know Why Mechanism Matters

If you’re the kind of buyer who can explain the difference between an assisted opener, an automatic knife, an OTF, and a switchblade without reaching for a glossary, this Saiyan Surge Anime-Assisted EDC Knife - Orange Blade fits right into your world. It doesn’t pretend to be something it’s not. It’s a spring-assisted folder with honest 440C steel, solid liner lock construction, and enough anime energy to stand out in a tray full of stonewash and black G-10. You’re not just buying a knife—you’re choosing a mechanism, a look, and a story that match how you carry.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.58
Weight (oz.) 4.67
Blade Color Orange
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 440C Stainless
Handle Finish Printed
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Goku
Safety Liner Lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock