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Sky Serpent Etched Handle Balisong Knife - Silver

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16.99


Cosmic Orbit Training Butterfly Knife - Chrome
Cosmic Orbit Training Butterfly Knife - Chrome
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Minimalist Hira Zukuri Flipping Butterfly Knife - Polished Silver
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Dragon Run Etched Butterfly Knife - Silver Steel

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8827/image_1920?unique=a569bb5

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Heat’s still hanging over the driveway, and the only breeze is the one you make flipping your butterfly knife open and closed. The Dragon Run Etched Butterfly Knife – Silver Steel rides heavy in the hand, all-metal with a satin drop point blade that snaps true on every rotation. Dragon-etched handles give you grip and style when you’re killing time on the tailgate or running drills in the side yard. Built for the Texan who likes their skills sharp and their steel louder than their words.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

BF233SL

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Dragon Run Etched Butterfly Knife in Texas Hands

End of the day, sun sliding behind a windmill, and the heat’s still radiating off the concrete. You’re leaned against the truck, idling through a few more minutes before heading in. In your hand, the Dragon Run Etched Butterfly Knife - Silver Steel clicks open and shut in clean rhythm, satin blade catching the last light, dragon scales etched down both handles flashing with each turn.

This isn’t a pocket box-cutter. It’s a full-metal butterfly knife built for the Texan who likes a little weight in the hand and a little style in the spin. Silver steel from blade to latch, drop point edge ready for real work when the show is over.

Why This Butterfly Knife Belongs in a Texas Routine

Most days in this state, a knife sees more cardboard than trouble. Feed sacks, bundled hay twine, straps on a pallet that just rolled off a trailer from Laredo — that’s the real workload. At 3.375 inches, this satin drop point blade is long enough to bite clean, short enough to stay manageable when you’re cutting zip ties in a cramped stock room or trimming paracord under a dim deer-camp lantern.

Closed, the knife sits at 5.5 inches. That means it disappears fine in a back pocket, front pocket, or tossed into the truck console beside the registration and a half-burned pack of smokes. When traffic on I-35 locks up and you’re parked on the shoulder for a while, that’s enough room to work through some flipping drills without banging your knuckles on the steering wheel.

The 5.69-ounce weight gives this butterfly knife a deliberate, honest swing. You feel every rotation. No plastic scales, no hollow flex. Just full steel handles, rounded ends, and a solid bite-handle latch that locks it down when you’re done.

Steel, Dragons, and the Way Texans Actually Use a Balisong

Those etched dragons running the length of both handles aren’t just for looks, though they do their part. The shallow grooves and scrollwork cut into the steel give you tactile markers when you’re flipping blind. When you pull it from a pocket in a dark dancehall parking lot just to fidget while your buddy argues with the bouncer about cover, you know which side is which without thinking.

Steel handles take dings and drops that would crack lighter materials. Miss a catch and send it skittering across a barn floor or down the concrete in a San Antonio warehouse dock, and you’re brushing off dust, not picking up broken scales. The satin blade finish shrugs off the kind of surface scratches that come from cutting through packing tape, nylon straps, and the odd piece of leather or hose.

And when the knife isn’t showing off on a Friday night tailgate, it’s perfectly happy doing the boring work — slicing open deer feed bags at a Hill Country lease, trimming rope on a Trinity River dock, or shaving splinters off a piece of mesquite before it goes on the smoker.

Texas Knife Law, Balisongs, and What’s Actually Legal

In this state, knife talk always circles back to one question: can you legally carry it? As of current Texas law, butterfly knives — balisongs like this one — are treated as regular knives, not forbidden weapons. The old restrictions on "switchblades" and certain folding mechanisms have been rolled back, and adult Texans can generally carry knives with blades over 5.5 inches in most places, with exceptions for certain locations like schools, secure government buildings, and some events.

This dragon-etched butterfly knife sits at a blade length under that 5.5-inch mark, which makes it even simpler for everyday carry across most of the state. It opens by manual flipping, not a spring-loaded switch, so it fits squarely in the legal folding-knife category under current Texas rules. You still have to respect posted signs and restricted locations, but for the daily grind — from a Corpus warehouse floor to a Panhandle gas station run — this balisong works within the law for most adults.

As always, laws can change, and cities can layer on their own quirks. But as of now, a butterfly knife like this is a legal, practical tool for most Texas carriers who want something with a little more personality than a plain lockback.

Where a Butterfly Knife Fits Texas Carry Culture

Not everyone in Texas reaches for a butterfly knife as their only blade. Some keep a small folder in the pocket for quick cuts and a balisong like this dragon-etched piece in the truck or at home for practice and show. At backyard cookouts in Beaumont, in college apartment patios in Lubbock, out behind a metal shop in Midland on lunch break — you see that familiar flipping motion from people who like their hands busy and their timing sharp.

This knife fits that role well. Enough weight to feel like real steel, enough style in the dragon engraving to stand out when it hits the table. When someone asks to try it, the smooth swing of the handles and the clean drop point edge do most of the talking.

From Driveway Drills to Ranch Work

On a cracked East Texas driveway, a teenager works through basic open-close sequences before sunset, learning rhythm instead of scrolling a phone. Out west, a ranch hand flicks the knife open once and uses the sharp, plain edge to cut loose a frayed lariat before a horse steps into it. Same knife, same steel, different pace of life.

The dragon motif gives it a bit of story, but what keeps it around is simple: it’s dependable. The latch holds when you close it and toss it into a tack room drawer. The steel blade takes a working edge with a few passes on a stone. The drop point tip is stout enough for everyday abuse, not a fragile showpiece that’s scared of real material.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Butterfly Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texans often lump OTF knives, switchblades, and butterfly knives into the same mental bucket. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTFs are generally legal for adults to own and carry in most day-to-day settings, with the main limitation being blade length over 5.5 inches in certain restricted locations like schools or secure facilities. This dragon-etched butterfly knife isn’t an OTF; it’s a manual balisong with a sub-5.5-inch blade, which places it even more squarely within typical Texas carry rules for adults. Always check the latest state statutes and any local ordinances before you clip or pocket-carry.

Is this dragon butterfly knife better as a flipper or a work knife in Texas?

It does both, but leans into flipping first. The 5.69-ounce full-steel build gives you solid momentum for practicing spins on a San Marcos apartment balcony or out behind a Denton coffee shop. At the same time, the 3.375-inch drop point blade and plain edge handle real cutting — tape, twine, feed sacks — without fuss. If you want a pure work knife, a lighter folder might be quicker. If you want something that can entertain your hands and still cut clean when needed, this hits the balance.

How should I carry a butterfly knife like this around Texas?

Most Texans either pocket-carry it closed with the latch engaged or keep it in a truck console, range bag, or backpack. Closed at 5.5 inches, it rides fine in a front or back pocket on jeans without digging into your hip. Around ranches, oil yards, and job sites, it’s often treated as a personal tool and fidget piece. Just stay mindful of posted rules at schools, courthouses, and secure facilities, and keep the blade under control when you’re flipping in public spaces.

Putting This Dragon-Etched Balisong to Work in Texas

Picture a late September night on the outskirts of town, air finally cooling off, crickets loud past the fenceline. Friends are gathered around a beat-up folding table, barbecue smoke hanging low. Someone cuts the last strap on a case of glass bottles with your knife, then hands it back. You thumb the latch, flip the dragon-handled butterfly open and closed a few times, the silver blade blurring in the glow from a single porch light.

It’s not a showpiece locked in a drawer. It’s the knife you toss into the truck before heading down a caliche road, the one you pull out when a box needs opening, a rope needs trimming, or your hands need something real to do while the night slows down. In a state where steel still means something, this dragon-etched butterfly knife fits right in — honest weight, clean edge, and just enough flash to say you chose it on purpose.

Blade Length (inches) 3.375
Overall Length (inches) 9.125
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 5.69
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Satin
Handle Material Steel
Theme Dragon
Latch Type Bite handle latch
Is Trainer No