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Midnight Web Dazzle Assisted Opening Knife - Black with Blue

Price:

8.25


Damascus Echo Dual-Pattern Assisted Opening Knife - Silver Steel
Damascus Echo Dual-Pattern Assisted Opening Knife - Silver Steel
12.45 12.45
Scrollforge Fantasy Assisted Opening Knife - Blue with White
Scrollforge Fantasy Assisted Opening Knife - Blue with White
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Scrollstrike Dagger-Inspired Assisted Opening Knife - Black with Blue Acrylic

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/8760/image_1920?unique=1d0c403

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This spring-assisted folding knife isn’t pretending to be tactical gear; it’s unapologetically ornamental and mechanically honest. The Scrollstrike carries a 4" spear-point blade with matching scroll/web graphics that flow cleanly into the handle, anchored by a blue acrylic inlay that catches light like a showpiece. A flipper tab drives the assisted opening, snapping the blade into lockup against a liner lock with a reassuring, deliberate feel. At 9.5" overall with a pocket clip and real hand-filling weight, it’s equal parts display knife and bold EDC statement.

8.25 8.25 USD 8.25

SP537BK

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Automatic Knives for Sale vs. Assisted Action: What the Scrollstrike Really Is

If you’re hunting for an automatic knife for sale and you’ve got the mechanical curiosity that actually deserves one, let’s start with honesty: this piece is a spring-assisted folder, not a true automatic. That matters. An automatic knife fires the blade open from a closed, static position at the press of a button. This Scrollstrike uses a flipper tab and assisted torsion system – you start the motion, the spring finishes it. The result is fast, decisive deployment without crossing into button-activated automatic or switchblade territory.

Why does that distinction belong on a page that targets serious automatic knife buyers? Because mechanism is the whole point. If you’re the kind of person who reads steel charts and cares about lock geometry, you don’t want some vague "springy" description. You want to know what you’re actually buying and where it sits on the spectrum between manual, assisted, and fully automatic knives.

Finding an Automatic Knife for Sale Means Understanding the Action

When you buy an automatic knife, you’re paying for three things: the action, the lock, and the way the handle lets you control both. The Scrollstrike Dagger-Inspired Assisted Opening Knife shares that same mechanical focus, even though it’s not a button-fired automatic. The flipper tab provides positive leverage; a short, clean pull overcomes the detent, and the assisted mechanism snaps the 4" spear-point blade into lockup with a single, confident motion.

That assisted action matters in real-world carry. True automatics and OTFs (out-the-front knives) can be spectacular, but they’re not always legal to carry everywhere. This assisted opening knife offers much of the speed and satisfaction of an automatic deployment while staying inside the assisted-folder category. For buyers who live in jurisdictions where a traditional automatic knife for sale is hard to justify or impossible to carry, this is how you keep a fast blade in your pocket without playing legal roulette.

Mechanics First: Blade, Lock, and Assisted Deployment

The Scrollstrike is built around a dagger-inspired, spear-point profile with a raised central spine that visually mimics a stiletto. You get a piercing-oriented tip with a straight, usable plain edge – no serrations to snag on material or complicate sharpening. The matte black finish keeps glare down and lets the white scroll/web artwork carry the visual weight.

Action Quality: How the Assisted Mechanism Feels in Hand

On a cheap assisted knife, the spring is either lazy or violent – you get sluggish half-opens or a blade that tries to jump out of your hand. This knife sits in the sweet spot for a budget-friendly assisted mechanism. The detent is firm enough that the blade stays put in pocket, but once you break it with the flipper tab, the torsion spring drives the blade home in one fluid stroke. The liner lock engages positively along the heel of the tang, and the long, symmetrical handle gives you plenty of leverage to thumb the lock aside when you’re ready to close.

Handle Geometry and Grip Reality

At 9.5" overall and 5.375" closed, this is a full-size assisted opening knife, not some disappearing micro-folder. The handle shape is slim and linear, with enough length to get all four fingers behind the flipper tab. The acrylic inlay isn’t just a pretty panel; it slightly changes the tactile feel down the center of the grip, giving you a subtle reference line when you draw and orient the knife. The weight, 7.27 oz., gives it that “real object” presence – more showpiece than featherweight slicer – but still perfectly manageable for pocket carry with the integrated clip.

Why This Belongs Next to Your Automatic Knives for Sale Collection

Walk any custom knife show and you’ll see the same pattern: one case of pure workhorses, one case of overbuilt tacticals, and then the case that gets all the fingerprints – the ornamental pieces with real mechanics behind them. The Scrollstrike lives in that last category. It’s an assisted opening knife built to draw the eye first, then earn its place when you feel the action.

The black blade and handle are canvas for a matching white scroll and web motif that runs the length of the knife, so the open profile reads as one continuous design. The blue acrylic inlay in the handle is the focal point, a bright iridescent strip that picks up ambient light and anchors the entire aesthetic. This is the kind of piece a collector puts in front of the automatics and OTF knives when non-knife people come over, because it explains the appeal without needing a lecture on coil springs and sear geometry.

Legal Context: Buying an Automatic Knife vs. Assisted Folder

If you’re browsing automatic knives for sale, you already know the law is a patchwork. In the U.S., federal law mainly concerns interstate commerce in switchblades and automatic knives – it doesn’t tell you what you can carry walking down your own street. That’s up to your state and sometimes your city. Some states have fully embraced modern automatic knife carry; others still treat a button-fired switchblade as contraband.

This knife’s advantage is simple: it’s a spring-assisted opening folder, not a push-button automatic or OTF. Most jurisdictions that restrict automatic knife carry are more permissive toward assisted opening knives where the user has to start the opening manually with a thumb stud or flipper, then the spring completes the motion. That doesn’t mean it’s universally legal – nothing in the knife world is – but it does mean you’re dealing with a category that’s often treated more favorably than a traditional automatic or switchblade.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (switchblades) are regulated mainly in terms of interstate sale and shipping, especially to consumers. Federal rules don’t outright ban ownership, but they do limit how automatic knives move across state lines and into certain jurisdictions. Actual carry legality is determined by state and local law. Some states now allow automatic knife carry with few restrictions; others still ban possession or carry entirely, or restrict blade length and opening method.

This Scrollstrike is an assisted opening knife, not an automatic. In many states, that’s a crucial distinction, because assisted openers are often treated like standard folding knives as long as a human initiates the opening via a flipper or stud. Before you buy any automatic knife, OTF knife, or assisted folder for carry, check your current state and local statutes – laws change, and ignorance won’t help you during a traffic stop.

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

Mechanically, these terms describe how the blade deploys, not just how aggressive it looks:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade: In common U.S. usage, a switchblade is an automatic knife – press a button or actuating device in the handle and the blade snaps open from fully closed to locked without you moving the blade itself. A coil spring or similar mechanism does the work.
  • OTF (out-the-front) knife: A specific automatic style where the blade travels straight out of the front of the handle. Double-action OTF knives allow you to deploy and retract the blade using the same slider; single-action OTF knives typically require manual retraction.
  • Assisted opening knife: What you have here. You begin opening the blade with a flipper or thumb stud, and an internal spring takes over once you pass a certain point. It feels fast and “automatic,” but mechanically it’s a different category because you start the motion.

The Scrollstrike lives firmly in that last category: a spring-assisted folding knife that visually echoes a dagger-style automatic without being one.

What makes this automatic-style knife worth buying?

Collectors don’t keep knives like this because they were cheap; they keep them because something about the design and action keeps them from being forgettable. Here, it’s the combination of ornamental cohesion and usable mechanics. The graphics on the blade aren’t random – they carry onto the handle. The blue acrylic inlay isn’t slapped on; it’s aligned with the knife’s centerline, reinforcing the dagger-inspired silhouette.

Mechanically, the assisted opening and liner lock are straightforward, proven systems – easy to understand, easy to maintain, and satisfying to run repeatedly. As an EDC, you get a long, confident grip, a pocket clip for tip-down carry, and a blade shape that can handle everyday cutting tasks despite the showpiece presentation. As a collection piece, it stands out in a row of blacked-out tacticals and sterile automatics because it actually looks like someone designed it, not just specified it.

Built for Enthusiasts Who Actually Care About the Mechanism

If you’re just looking for something that “looks cool,” there are a hundred forgettable knives in the same price band. If you’re the sort of buyer who wants an automatic knife for sale to be described in terms of how it deploys, how it locks, and how it lives in the pocket, this assisted opening Scrollstrike fits the mindset. It’s not pretending to be a covert duty tool; it’s open about being an ornamental, dagger-inspired assisted folder with enough mechanical integrity to earn a spot next to your autos and OTFs.

Own it because you’re the kind of enthusiast who notices when a flipper tab geometry is right, who appreciates a clean liner lock engagement, and who understands exactly why action – not hype – is the real reason you buy any knife, automatic or otherwise.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9.5
Closed Length (inches) 5.375
Weight (oz.) 7.27
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Acrylic
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock