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Venom Shroud Skull-Embossed Spring Assisted Knife - Toxic Green

Price:

6.43


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Night Venom Skeleton Assisted EDC Knife - Toxic Green

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/5915/image_1920?unique=748919d

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A spring-assisted knife built to look like trouble and open like it means it. The Night Venom Skeleton Assisted EDC Knife snaps to attention with a black-oxidized 3Cr13 drop point and a toxic-green skull-embossed aluminum handle that actually fits the hand. Liner lock, jimping, and pocket clip make it a real EDC tool, not just wall art. If your everyday carry leans loud, this is the one that earns its pocket time.

6.43 6.43 USD 6.43 8.99

DSA2006GN

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Automatic-Grade Attitude, Assisted Precision: Venom Shroud Skull-Embossed Spring Assisted Knife - Toxic Green

This isn’t a polite little pocket knife. The Venom Shroud Skull-Embossed Spring Assisted Knife in toxic green is what happens when an everyday carry folder borrows its attitude from custom showpieces and horror art. Spring-assisted deployment, skull-saturated aluminum scales, and a black-oxidized drop point turn a budget-friendly EDC into something you’ll actually reach for — and actually enjoy flicking open.

Why Buyers Reach for This ‘Automatic Knife for Sale’ Style of Action

Let’s get the language right: this is a spring-assisted folding knife, not a true automatic knife. That matters to serious buyers — and to the law. But in the hand, when you hit that thumb stud and feel the spring drive the blade into lockup, it scratches the same itch that has you searching for an automatic knife for sale in the first place.

The assist is tuned for a decisive, one-way snap rather than a lazy swing. You start the blade manually; once you clear the detent, the internal spring takes over and drives the 3.36-inch drop point into battery. Paired with a reliable liner lock and solid jimping at the thumb ramp, it gives you that automatic-adjacent satisfaction with simpler mechanics and, in many places, friendlier carry rules.

EDC-Ready Mechanics: Where the Action, Steel, and Ergonomics Line Up

The Venom Shroud is built around a classic assisted folder layout: liner lock chassis, aluminum handle scales, and a pocket clip to anchor it in your jeans or vest. What separates it from the pile of gas-station specials is how the details actually work together.

Action and Lockup That Feel Better Than the Price Tag

The deployment is spring-assisted through a thumb-stud / cutout start — you nudge the blade open, the torsion spring finishes the job with a clean, audible snap. No double-action complexity, no OTF track to maintain, just a straightforward side-opening assisted mechanism that’s easy to keep running with minimal cleaning.

Once open, a steel liner lock engages behind the tang. For a knife in this category, the priority is consistent engagement and easy one-handed closing, both of which this design hits. The jimping on the spine near the handle gives your thumb a real index point, so you’re not sliding around on a glossy skull print while cutting.

3Cr13 Stainless: Honest Working Steel

The black-oxidized blade is 3Cr13 stainless — a tough, corrosion-resistant budget steel that takes a fast, forgiving edge. Is it going to outlast a premium powdered steel? No, and it doesn’t pretend to. What it does do is shrug off sweat, moisture, and casual abuse while resharpening quickly on basic stones or a pull-through sharpener. For an EDC that’s going to see package duty, light utility, and the occasional rough task, this is a steel choice that makes sense.

Buying an Automatic Knife for Sale vs. This Assisted EDC: Where It Fits in Your Rotation

If your search history is full of “automatic knives for sale,” you’re probably chasing that fast, mechanical satisfaction — the sound, the snap, the feel of a blade that wants to be deployed. The Venom Shroud gives you that vibe in an assisted format that many buyers use as a bridge into, or alongside, true autos and OTF knives.

At 8.15 inches overall and 4.78 inches closed, it rides in that sweet spot for EDC: big enough to cut comfortably, compact enough to pocket without feeling like a brick. The pocket clip and lanyard hole give you options — tip-down pocket carry, pack strap, or lashed to gear. The contoured handle with finger grooves and jimping lets you choke up and get real purchase, even though the surface is a glossy printed aluminum.

Skull-Embossed Toxic Green: Collector Detail in a Working Knife

Let’s talk about the look, because that’s why this knife exists in this configuration. The handle is a full-on toxic skull scene: large white skulls over a cracked stone background, screaming neon-green skeletons weaving through the design, all under a glossy finish. It’s not subtle. It’s not supposed to be.

For collectors, this lands in the “fantasy-tactical EDC” niche — a piece that stands out in a drawer full of black G10 and stonewash, but still folds, locks, and cuts like a real knife. The paw-print style cutouts in the blade are more than decoration; they lighten the blade slightly and give a distinct profile that makes it recognizable at a glance in a collection.

Why This Stays in the Rotation Instead of the Display Case

Plenty of skull knives are dead weight: bad ergos, sloppy liners, and paint that chips the second it meets keys. This one is built to be carried. The aluminum handle is contoured with honest finger grooves, the liner lock is easy to access without digging your thumb into a sharp edge, and the assisted mechanism rewards fidget-opening as much as it supports actual work.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, there’s a critical distinction between federal law and state/local law. At the federal level, the Switchblade Knife Act mainly restricts interstate commerce and shipment of true automatic knives (where a button or device in the handle deploys the blade) under certain conditions. Many states have updated their laws and now allow ownership and carry of automatics, but others still restrict blade length, carry method, or outright possession.

This knife is spring-assisted, not a true automatic or OTF switchblade. In many jurisdictions, assisted openers are treated like standard folding knives because you must start the blade manually before the spring engages. However, you should always check your specific state and local knife laws — and, if relevant, workplace or school policies — before carrying any knife, automatic or assisted.

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

Collectors draw clear lines between these terms:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade (side-opening): Press a button, lever, or in-handle actuator and the blade deploys under spring pressure. The blade swings out from the side like a regular folder, but is powered entirely by the mechanism. "Automatic knife" and "switchblade" are often used interchangeably in legal language.
  • OTF (out-the-front) automatic: The blade travels straight out the front of the handle along a track. Most modern OTFs are double-action: the same sliding control deploys and retracts the blade using internal springs.
  • Assisted-opening knife (this one): You start the blade manually with a thumb stud, flipper tab, or cutout. Once you overcome a detent, an internal spring assists and snaps the blade into lockup. Without that initial manual movement, nothing happens — that’s the key mechanical and legal distinction.

What makes this automatic-style knife worth buying?

The Venom Shroud is worth adding to your rotation for three reasons: first, the action delivers automatic-adjacent snap in a simpler, assisted mechanism you can maintain without a bench full of tools. Second, the 3Cr13 stainless blade and liner lock give you an honest working edge and dependable lockup appropriate for real EDC tasks. Third, the skull-embossed toxic-green aluminum handle gives it a visual identity that doesn’t disappear in a drawer or on a table at a knife meet — you know exactly which knife you’re reaching for.

Choosing an Automatic Knife for Sale or an Assisted EDC That Matches Your Identity

Whether you eventually buy a full-blown automatic knife for sale, start collecting OTFs, or stay in the assisted lane, the knives that last in your pocket are the ones that get two things right: the mechanics and the personality. The Venom Shroud Skull-Embossed Spring Assisted Knife - Toxic Green earns its place by giving you a decisive assisted action, practical EDC dimensions, and a skull-and-venom aesthetic that doesn’t pretend to be subtle.

If you’re the buyer who can tell the difference between an assisted opener and a true switchblade — and you still want a knife that looks like it crawled off a metal album cover — this is the kind of piece that fits. It’s loud, functional, and mechanically honest. In a market full of bland, this is one assisted EDC that actually deserves the pocket clip it ships with.

Blade Length (inches) 3.36
Overall Length (inches) 8.15
Closed Length (inches) 4.78
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Black oxidized
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3CR13 Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Skull
Safety Liner Lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock