Skip to Content
Reaper Ring Skull-Locked Automatic Karambit Knife - Neon Green

Price:

10.99


Gravebloom Memento Automatic Karambit Knife - Matte Black
Gravebloom Memento Automatic Karambit Knife - Matte Black
10.99 10.99
Dead Love Skull Horror Automatic Karambit Knife - Matte Black
Dead Love Skull Horror Automatic Karambit Knife - Matte Black
6.99 6.99

Graveyard Talon Quick-Deploy Automatic Karambit Knife - Skull Green

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1082/image_1920?unique=de4a861

11 sold in last 24 hours

South Texas parking lot, wind kicking dust under sodium lights. This automatic karambit sits flat in your pocket until your thumb finds the safety, then the button. The matte-black talon snaps out, ring locking your hand behind it. At 5 inches closed and just over 3 ounces, it stays light, fast, and ready for boxes, straps, and those nights you’d rather be over-prepared than caught guessing.

10.99 10.99 USD 10.99

SB201SKGN

Not Available For Sale

7 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

You May Also Like These

Automatic Karambit Built for After-Dark Texas Moments

Most nights end quiet. Some don’t. This automatic karambit was made for that long walk across a dim lot behind a San Antonio strip center, or cutting straps in the back of a Midland warehouse with the radios off and the air thick with dust. Compact in the pocket, hooked solid in your grip, it’s there for the small tasks you plan for and the tension you don’t.

Closed, it sits at 5 inches, light at about three and a quarter ounces, so it disappears in gym shorts, work pants, or the side pocket of a ranch jacket. When you need it, the push button kicks the matte-black talon blade into play with one firm press, ring locking your hand behind the edge so you stay in control even when sweat, rain, or adrenaline show up.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Pull of an Automatic Karambit

Folks searching for an OTF knife in Texas usually want the same few things: fast deployment, one-handed control, and a blade that doesn’t argue when it meets rope, plastic, or hide. This automatic karambit speaks to that same instinct, just with a different mechanism and a hooked profile built for retention first and flash second.

The talon-style blade runs about two and a half inches, finished in matte black with three round cutouts that keep it light and quick through the swing. Blade and handle curve together into a natural arc, ending in a ring that anchors your little finger. That ring is the difference between dropping a knife in a sweaty Houston alley and having it still in your hand when things get clumsy and close.

On the handle, the green skull and gear graphics aren’t just a paint job. They fit the places this knife makes sense: late-night security walks between buildings in Austin, training reps in a garage gym in Lubbock, or riding in the console of a truck that spends more time parked under fluorescent light than open sky. It has the attitude of the OTF knife Texas buyers love, with the curved control of a karambit.

Ring, Button, Safety: How It Carries Through Texas Days and Nights

In Texas, carry isn’t theory. It’s how a knife rides in a boot crossing a caliche lot, how it sits in a pocket while you’re bent over fencing, how fast you can find the button with one thumb when your other hand is full of halter, boxes, or gear. This automatic karambit was built with that in mind.

The plastic handle keeps the weight down and doesn’t complain about sweat, grit, or June heat in a Corpus Christi warehouse. Matte texture and shallow contours give your fingers a place to settle, so the green skull art is layered over real grip, not just smooth showpiece plastic. Silver-tone hardware locks everything together without drawing attention.

There’s no pocket clip, which suits certain Texas carry styles better than you’d think. It drops clean into a front pocket, jacket pocket, or truck-door cubby, where the ring becomes the retrieval point. Hook the ring with a finger, pull, and the handle falls into your palm. From there, the safety switch sits under your thumb, followed by the push button. Once that matte-black blade snaps into place, you’re locked in, ring braced, hand behind the edge instead of chasing it.

Practical Texas Use Cases: From Warehouse Floors to Backlot Corners

This isn’t a pasture fence knife. It’s more at home behind a Fort Worth club, in the back stairwell of an apartment complex in Houston, or on night shift in a Waco distribution center. The short talon edge opens taped cartons, bites into nylon banding, and slices shrink-wrap without forcing you into awkward angles. The curve lets you pull through material with your wrist in a neutral, strong position.

In tighter quarters—crowded buses leaving a San Marcos game, downtown parking garages, or late-night gas station stops off I-35—that same curve and ring carry over into defensive training scenarios. It rewards practice: repetition in the garage, reps on a training dummy, drills that match the tight shoulders and straight lines of Texas urban corners.

Texas OTF Knife Law Concerns and Automatic Karambit Reality

Plenty of buyers still ask if an automatic or switchblade is worth the trouble in this state. Law used to make people cautious. That changed.

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law no longer bans automatic knives, including OTF and button-deploy blades like this one. The real line now is blade length and location. This karambit’s blade sits around two and a half inches, well under the five-and-a-half-inch threshold that defines a “location-restricted knife.” That’s what matters when you carry it into town, through a parking garage, or on the job in most workplaces across the state.

There are still places in Texas where knives over that 5.5-inch limit can draw legal heat—schools, certain government buildings, and other posted locations. This blade stays under that mark, which makes it easier to keep on you without second-guessing every errand or shift. Still, it’s on you to check local rules and employer policies; the state gives room, but businesses and counties sometimes add their own guardrails.

Safety Switch and Pocket Peace of Mind in Texas Heat

Automatic blades in Texas pockets mean sweat, movement, and long days in vehicles that turn into ovens by 3 p.m. The safety switch on this automatic karambit answers the main concern: accidental deployment. Slide the safety on before you drop it into shorts, scrub pants, or jacket pockets, and the push button stays dead. That matters when you’re crawling under a truck in a Laredo service bay or climbing bleachers at a Friday night game in Abilene.

Texas OTF Knife Buyer Mindset: Why This Blade Earns a Spot

Someone searching for the best OTF knife in Texas is usually balancing three things: fast action, legal peace of mind, and a blade that fits their actual day. This automatic karambit shares their priorities, even though it’s not an OTF in the strict mechanical sense.

You get the same button-press speed Texans chase in an OTF knife, but with a curved talon that locks in with the ring. The compact 6.75-inch overall length with blade open keeps it from feeling like overkill in public spaces. The plain-edge matte-black steel isn’t here to brag about high-end metallurgy; it’s here to cut when you press it into work—cardboard, light cord, banding, fabric—and touch up easily after.

The skull-green handle is a statement, but not a loud one at distance. In a dark bar lot in El Paso or a side street off Sixth in Austin, it reads as dark hardware until it’s close. Up close, the skulls and gears say what you already know: this isn’t your first knife, and you’re not carrying it for show alone.

Training-Focused Texans and the Karambit Curve

Plenty of Texas buyers drill with karambits at home, in gyms, or on private ranges east of town. The curve, ring, and automatic action on this piece make it a solid training partner for those sessions. At this price and build, you can run it hard, adjust your grip, test carries—front pocket, waistband, console—and learn how the ring and button play together without babying it like a showpiece.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Automatic and OTF-Style Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas lifted its old ban on switchblades and OTF knives, so automatics are legal at the state level. What you still have to watch is blade length over 5.5 inches in certain restricted locations like schools and some government properties. This automatic karambit sits under that threshold, which simplifies everyday carry in most Texas towns and cities. Always double-check posted signs and local rules before you walk in.

Is this automatic karambit practical for daily carry in Texas cities?

It is if your daily life matches its strengths. In Dallas or Houston, where most of your time is spent in parking structures, loading docks, back hallways, or late-shift runs to the store, the short talon blade, ring grip, and fast button deployment earn their keep. It won’t replace a big ranch knife, but it fits urban and night-shift Texas just fine.

Should I choose this automatic karambit or a true OTF knife for Texas carry?

If you want pure straight-line deployment and a slimmer profile in dress pants, a true OTF knife may suit you better. If you value retention, curved cutting power, and a ring that keeps the blade anchored during stress or sweat, this automatic karambit is the smarter pick. Both live comfortably under Texas law when sized right; the choice comes down to how and where you actually move through the state.

First Night Out: This Knife in Your Texas Routine

Picture a humid night behind a Houston strip mall, air thick with fryer smell and dumpsters lining the alley. You’ve closed up, cash bag in one hand, keys in the other. That automatic karambit sits where you left it—front pocket, ring just high enough to catch with a fingertip. You clear the corner, thumb the safety, feel the push button under skin that still smells like bleach and detergent. The talon blade snaps open with a sound you barely notice anymore.

A few minutes later you’re at the truck, blade buried instead in the plastic straps holding tomorrow’s stock together in the bed. Same motion. Same control. Same ring anchoring your hand. It’s not the biggest knife you own, or the prettiest. It’s the one that makes sense in Texas parking lots after dark—and that’s why it stays with you.

Blade Length (inches) 2.5
Overall Length (inches) 6.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Weight (oz.) 3.28
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Talon
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Material Plastic
Theme Skull
Safety Safety switch
Pocket Clip No