Skip to Content
Midnight Godfather XL Rapid-Deploy Automatic Stiletto Knife - Black Wood

Price:

36.99


Mercenary Quick-Strike California Legal Automatic Knife - Black Blade
Mercenary Quick-Strike California Legal Automatic Knife - Black Blade
16.99 16.99
Eagle Crest Signature Knuckle Paperweight - Silver
Eagle Crest Signature Knuckle Paperweight - Silver
30.99 30.99

Midnight Godfather XL Rapid-Deploy Automatic Stiletto Knife - Black Wood

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1850/image_1920?unique=6843efa

12 sold in last 24 hours

Late-night on a caliche lease road, this automatic stiletto rides in the truck console, black-on-black and waiting. One press and the five-inch dagger blade snaps out, dead straight, no hesitation. Matte steel, black wood scales, gold hardware, and a safety switch that keeps it tamed until you need it. It feels more like a habit than a toy—a long, lean automatic built for Texans who like their knives with some ceremony and some bite.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

GFST9BB

Not Available For Sale

2 people are viewing this right now

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

This combination does not exist.

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

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

When an Automatic Stiletto Belongs in the Truck, Not the Drawer

The kind of night this knife was made for starts on a two-lane outside San Angelo. You're parked on the shoulder, hood up, truck bed full of tools. In the console, not rolling around with receipts and gas station mints, but set in its sheath, is an automatic stiletto that feels more like part of the kit than an accessory.

Thirteen inches open, five inches of matte black dagger blade, and a black wood handle that disappears in a dark cab. One press of the button and it snaps to full length with that unmistakable automatic sound—quick, clean, and final. No flourish. Just steel where you need it, when you ask for it.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Pull of a Classic Automatic

Folks who hunt for an OTF knife in Texas are usually after speed and attitude in the same package. This XL automatic stiletto answers that same itch from a different angle. Instead of a double-action OTF, you get a front push-button automatic that throws a long, narrow blade out with the same kind of urgency, but in a Godfather profile that feels like it’s stepped out of an old pool hall or South Texas backroom.

That dagger blade is matte black steel, ground lean for piercing and precise point work. It opens with a single press and locks solid, ready to cut cord, slice tape on feed sacks, or punch through thick plastic wrap on a pallet in a San Antonio warehouse. It’s not trying to be a ranch chore knife. It’s the knife you pull when you want reach, control, and a little bit of ceremony.

How This XL Automatic Rides in Real Texas Carry

This isn’t a jeans-pocket piece. With a seven-inch closed length and no pocket clip, it carries better in a boot, coat pocket, or nylon sheath on a belt. Slide it inside a pair of square-toe boots under pressed Wranglers in a Fort Worth dance hall. Drop it in the door pocket on a long haul between Midland and Lubbock. Or keep it in the center console, sheath and all, where your hand finds it without looking.

The black wood handle feels flat and secure, even with dusty hands from a lease road or sweat from a July tailgate. Gold pins and hardware break up the black, giving you just enough visual reference to find the button and safety in low light under a dome light or on a back porch. The push-button sits forward, right where your thumb naturally lands, and the safety switch rides the spine of the handle—easy to nudge off with muscle memory, hard to bump by accident.

Texas OTF Knife Law Shifts and What That Means for Automatics

Folks still walk into shops asking if switchblades and OTF knives are legal here. For years the answer was complicated. Now it’s straightforward. Texas law changed to allow automatic knives, including switchblades and OTF-style blades, for everyday ownership and most carry situations, as long as you’re not a prohibited person and you respect location-based restrictions like schools, secure areas, and certain government buildings.

Where Automatic Blades Fit into Modern Texas Carry

That change opened the door for Texans to carry the kind of automatic stiletto that used to stay in a display case or a private collection. A long-bladed automatic like this Godfather-style XL can ride in a truck console on ranch land in Lampasas County, sit in a desk drawer in a Houston shop office, or tuck into a boot when you head into town—so long as you keep an eye on local rules and posted signs. It’s on you to stay current, but the old blanket fear of carrying an automatic is gone.

In that context, this knife leans into what an automatic does best: fast, one-handed deployment when the other hand’s busy holding a gate, a box, or a leash. The safety switch gives you control—locked when it’s bouncing in a truck or boot, hot when you set it before stepping out.

Midnight Godfather XL Automatic Stiletto: Built for Statement and Use

Look close and the design choices make sense for a Texas buyer who wants more than a toy switchblade. The black wood scales give you warmth and grip, not the cold rattle of cheap plastic. Matte black steel on the blade cuts glare when you’re working under sun or work lights, and it hides scuffs from the kind of use that would make a polished blade look tired too fast.

At thirteen inches open, it has reach—enough to get behind a pallet strap without leaning into the edge, enough to stay clear of a cactus spine while you’re trimming trash growth along a fence line outside Kerrville. The dagger profile means it’s symmetrical and balanced in hand, so turning it point-down to punch through thick hose or heavy cardboard feels natural.

Automatic Action You Can Trust Under Texas Conditions

The front push-button sends the blade out with a straight-line, no-wobble snap. After a dusty afternoon in the Hill Country or a night in a truck that’s seen its share of caliche, the mechanism still hits with authority if you keep it reasonably clean. This isn’t a safe queen unless you decide to treat it like one. It was built to ride and work, then clean up and sit on a shelf looking mean.

And while it ships with a nylon sheath, most Texans will end up finding their own place for it—a belt rig on a hog hunt outside Uvalde, a boot sheath for late nights in Dallas, or that specific corner of the console where your hand falls as naturally as it does to the radio knobs.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers Ask About Automatics Like This

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law now allows automatic knives, including switchblades and OTF designs, for most adults in most places. The big shift is that owning and carrying an automatic blade is no longer broadly banned. What hasn’t changed is that some locations are still off-limits—schools, secure government areas, and certain posted venues. Laws can change, and local rules can layer on top, so it’s on you to check current statutes and respect posted signs before you carry an OTF or automatic stiletto into town.

Is this XL automatic stiletto practical for everyday carry in Texas?

For a Texan who lives in boots, trucks, and long drives, yes—if you think of everyday carry as more than just pocket carry. This isn’t a front-pocket box cutter. It’s a console, belt, or boot knife. On a ranch outside Abilene or on night shift at a distribution center outside Dallas, the long blade and one-handed automatic action earn their keep cutting strapping, trimming line, opening feed, or handling small chores where reach matters. It’s practical if your everyday life actually gives it something to do.

How does this compare to buying an OTF knife in Texas?

When you look to buy an OTF knife in Texas, you’re usually chasing fast deployment, one-handed use, and a certain attitude in the hand. This XL automatic stiletto hits those same notes with a different mechanism. Instead of a blade shooting straight out of the handle, you get a side-opening automatic that still fires quick from a simple push-button. If you like the clean lines and classic look of a Godfather-style profile, but want the same kind of presence as a big OTF, this gives you that feel without giving up reliability or simplicity.

First Night Out with the Midnight Godfather

Picture a warm October evening behind a small-town bar off Highway 90. Trucks lined up in the gravel, music leaking from thin walls. You step out, lean on the tailgate, crack open a taped-up box someone left in the bed. Your hand finds the black wood grip without looking. Safety off, button pressed, blade out—just a clean, fast motion you barely think about.

The matte black steel kisses through tape and plastic like it’s nothing, then folds back into its long handle with a quiet satisfaction. It slides back into its sheath and into its spot in the console, ready for the next roadside stop, gate check, or late-night favor. This is the automatic knife a Texan carries when they want more than utility—when they want a tool with some weight to its presence, as steady and unhurried as the road they’re driving.

Blade Length (inches) 5
Overall Length (inches) 13
Closed Length (inches) 7
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Wood
Button Type Push
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety switch
Pocket Clip No