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Reaper Tri-Edge 3-Piece Throwing Star Set - Midnight Black

Price:

16.99


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Grim Harvest Tri-Edge Throwing Star Set - Midnight Black

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Evening settles over a Hill Country tank and the mesquite goes still. This tri-edge throwing star set rides easy in the included sheath, three 3.5-inch blackout blades balanced for clean, repeatable throws. The reaper emblem isn’t for show—it centers your grip and sightline. For backyard practice behind the barn or a skull-marked piece on the shelf, this set brings tight groups, dark steel, and a story you don’t have to explain.

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When the Pasture Goes Quiet, the Stars Come Out

Last light over a scrub pasture, wind dropping off the pecans, and the only sound is steel taking a target. That’s where this three-piece Grim Harvest Tri-Edge Throwing Star Set earns its keep. Compact 3.5-inch profiles, midnight black finish, and that hooded skull riding the center of each star—built for the same kind of calm focus you get on a quiet edge of town range.

These aren’t wall toys. Each star carries three leaf-shaped blades that bite and stick clean when your throw is right. The balance feels natural from the first grip. You’ll know it the moment it leaves your hand and finds wood.

Why This Set Belongs in a Texas Backyard Range

Texas land doesn’t all look the same. Some folks throw under live oaks on rocky Hill Country soil. Others have a plywood backstop leaned against an old round bale out past Lubbock. In both places, a compact throwing star set like this makes sense—easy to carry, easy to reset, and tough enough to take missed throws into rough boards again and again.

The 3.5-inch diameter keeps each star quick off the fingers without feeling twitchy. Three evenly spaced blades mean no hunting for the right edge; any arm you grab gives you a workable release. The blackout steel with stonewashed contrast doesn’t glare in full sun, whether you’re tossing beside a tank at midday or under barn lights after supper.

The reaper emblem does more than match your attitude. That central skull gives your thumb a repeatable reference point, so your grip and rotation stay consistent from throw to throw. In a state where practice often happens out back instead of at some formal range, repeatability matters more than fancy talk.

Carrying a Throwing Star Set in Texas Life

Most Texans won’t carry throwing stars in a pocket to town, and they don’t need to. This set rides best where Texas life actually happens—tucked in a truck console on land you manage, in the side pocket of a range bag, or hanging on a nail in a barn where the target board lives.

The included sheath holds all three stars snug. Slide it into a work bag headed to a lease, or drop it in the door pocket of a ranch truck. When the day’s work is done—gates checked, cattle counted, feeders filled—you’ve got a quick way to burn off the last of the daylight and your energy.

In small-town Texas, it’s not unusual to have a target set up behind the shop or off the back patio, out of sight from the road. A compact throwing star set like this keeps that habit low-profile and controlled: simple gear, clear purpose, easy to stow when you’re done.

Texas Law, Throwing Stars, and Where They Fit

Texas used to draw a hard line on certain blades. Those days have eased up, but it still pays to understand where throwing gear like this belongs. Under current Texas law, throwing stars are not singled out as prohibited weapons the way they once were. The state now focuses more on how and where a weapon is carried—especially in schools, courts, and other restricted places—than on the mere fact that it has sharp edges.

On your own land, or at private property where you have permission, this three-piece set is right at home as a target sport tool—no different in spirit than a hatchet thrown at a stump. The smart move is to treat these stars like any other sharp: transported secured in the sheath, not rolling loose in a truck cab, and never brought into places that ban weapons outright.

Texas culture leans heavy on personal responsibility. If a deputy drives up to a lease gate and asks what you’re doing, it sounds a lot better to say you’ve got a contained, balanced star set you use for target practice on your own backstop than to pretend you’re not carrying anything at all.

How This Set Holds Up in Real Texas Conditions

From Gulf humidity to Panhandle dust, Texas is hard on metal. The blackout finish with stonewashed contrast on these stars helps hide the small scuffs that come from missing the sweet spot and catching splintered board. Edges come sharp out of the box and take well to light touch-ups if you’re the type to keep everything tuned.

Because each star shares the same tri-edge pattern, your muscle memory builds faster. Whether you’re throwing at a cedar round in the Piney Woods or an OSB board screwed to a T-post out in West Texas, you don’t have to re-learn feel from one piece to the next. Three stars, one behavior.

Design Details That Matter When You’re Throwing on Texas Ground

The inner curves between each arm stay smooth, with no finger holes or gimmicks to snag under a hard throw. That matters when your hands are dry and dusty from a day working fences. The tri-point geometry keeps the weight centered, so wobble comes from bad form, not bad build.

The reaper insignia on each blade face gives the set a dark, unified look, true. But it also makes these stars easy to find when they glance off target and drop in grass or sand. That black-and-steel contrast stands out against caliche, hardpan, or Bermuda stubble when you walk your throws.

Set up a plywood board against a barn wall in the shade, pace off your distance, and you’ll feel the difference between a cheap novelty and a matched set built with intention. These fly true when you do your part.

Backyard Practice, Lease Weekends, and Shop Wall Targets

Some Texans work a regular job all week, then drive out Friday night to a family place. A set like this fits that rhythm. It lives in the same duffel as work gloves and a flashlight, comes out after supper, and turns a bare stretch of fence line into a small, personal range. You don’t need power, Wi-Fi, or much space—just a safe backstop and a little distance.

In town, it might stay at the shop. Closed up in its sheath, hanging behind the counter or by the back door, ready for a five-minute break where you step out, throw six, and come back inside with your head cleared.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Star Sets

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Automatic and out-the-front knives are legal to own and carry in most of Texas for adults, as long as they stay out of certain restricted locations like schools, courthouses, and secure airport areas. The state shifted away from banning specific knife types and now focuses on where and how a blade is carried. Minors and prohibited locations still have stricter limits, so it’s worth checking the latest Texas statutes if you plan to carry any automatic knife regularly.

Is this throwing star set meant for self-defense in Texas?

No. This three-piece set is best treated as a target and practice tool, not a carry option for self-defense. Texas gives you broad rights to own blades, but throwing stars are impractical and risky in a real confrontation. On your land or trusted private property, they shine as a controlled, skill-based sport. For everyday defense, Texans are better served by a dependable folding or fixed blade that carries securely and deploys under stress.

How should a Texas buyer decide if this is the right throwing set?

Ask yourself where you’ll throw, how often, and what kind of space you control. If you’ve got a safe backstop on a lease, a farm, or even a sturdy board behind the house, this compact tri-edge set makes sense—three matched stars, one sheath, small footprint. If you live in an apartment without a private outdoor range or clear line of sight, you might be better off with a different kind of blade you can use daily. This set belongs where you can throw without neighbors or traffic anywhere near your line.

Picture Your First Throws on Familiar Texas Ground

Imagine a board bolted to a mesquite post at the edge of your place. Crickets starting up, heat finally bleeding off the dirt. You pull the sheath from your truck door pocket, slide out three midnight-black stars, and feel the weight settle into your hand. First throw lands wide. Second bites closer. By the third, you’re grouping tight around that reaper skull in the center. No crowd, no noise, just you, the target, and a small piece of steel that feels like it belongs where you stand.

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