Midnight Warrior Throwing Knife Set - Black Steel
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Late light on a south Texas fence line, plywood target wired to a T-post, dust hanging in the air. This three-piece Midnight Warrior throwing knife set rides quiet in its black nylon sheath, then hits with clean, repeatable balance. Six-inch, all-steel spears that don’t mind mesquite thorns, dry heat, or the occasional rocky miss. For Texans who’d rather hone their throw on a backstop than watch someone else do it on a screen.
When the Heat Breaks and the Targets Come Out
The workday runs long east of Lubbock. By the time the last gate’s chained and the feed’s put up, the sun’s low and the wind finally eases off the cotton. That’s when the plywood target comes out of the shed and gets wired to the same fence post as always. From a back pocket or belt, the Midnight Warrior Throwing Knife Set - Black Steel comes out in one quiet motion, three matched blades in a single sheath, ready to eat up that familiar ten-yard walk.
These six-inch throwing knives are small enough to ride unnoticed but balanced enough that, once you find your distance, the steel does what it should. All black, matte, no shine to catch headlights from the county road or porch lights from next door. Just three identical spears meant for repetition: step, throw, step, throw.
Why This Throwing Knife Set Belongs in a Texas Yard
Texas dirt isn’t kind to gear. You miss the board in the Hill Country and you’re in limestone. Miss behind a barn outside Abilene and you’re in hard-packed caliche. The full-tang, one-piece steel build on this throwing knife set means there are no handle scales to crack, no joints to loosen, no screws to back out from heat or vibration. Each knife is cut from solid steel, blade and handle in one line, so bad throws and rocky ground don’t end the night early.
The spear-point design lets you throw from either rotation without babying your grip, and the double-edged profile keeps the business end honest. Multiple cutout holes through blade and handle pull a little weight out of the frame and give you reference points for grip. In a Texas backyard where the wind can shift between throws, having three identical knives tuned to the same feel matters more than any catalog adjective.
Carrying a Throwing Knife Set Across Texas Ground
This isn’t a pocket piece. It rides where Texas knives have for decades: on the belt, behind the truck seat, or in the range bag. The black nylon sheath stacks all three knives in one slim column. It threads onto a belt clean, hugging close enough not to catch when you climb a fence or slide into a truck that’s already got mud baked onto the sills.
The sheath flap snaps down over a flame-shaped accent plate—more attitude than decoration—and keeps the knives from rattling when you cut across a gravel lot or walk the length of an arena. Whether you’re headed to a friend’s land outside San Marcos or setting up a target in a North Dallas backyard, this set carries like a small tool roll: compact, predictable, out of the way until you need it.
Texas Knife Laws, Training, and Where Throwers Fit
Texas loosened its blade laws years back. Switchblades, automatics, and long blades used to live in a gray area or worse. Now, for most adults, the questions are about place and intent, not the tool itself. A dedicated throwing knife set like this one is a training and recreation tool first—three fixed blades designed to live in a target, not a pocket.
How Throwing Knives Are Treated Under Texas Law
Under current Texas law, knives—including throwing knives—are generally legal to own and carry for adults, with location restrictions you still have to respect: schools, secure areas, certain government buildings, and other posted spots that limit weapons. The law doesn’t single out throwing knives by name the way it used to call out switchblades and other “illegal” types. Instead, blade length and location drive most of what matters in daily life.
These six-inch throwers fall into a size that many Texans use on their own land, at private ranges, and on rural property with no issue. The smart play is what most seasoned Texans already do: transport them in their sheath, keep them put away when you’re not on your own ground or a range that welcomes them, and always pay attention to posted rules in towns and venues.
Training on Texas Land, Not in a Lab
Real practice doesn’t happen in a climate-controlled bay. It happens behind a barn in San Angelo with a board that’s seen better days, or in a scrubby corner lot outside Odessa where the mesquite branches keep stealing the light. The matte black finish on these knives cuts down on glare when the west sun is still too bright, and the simple spear point keeps sticking even when the board starts to splinter from hard, dry hits.
Because all three knives share the same six-inch footprint and cutouts, you can run true three-count drills the way knife throwers do at small meets and back-lot competitions. No swapping between heavy and light, no guessing where the balance sits. Just throw, reset, throw again until your feet remember the distance on their own.
Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Knife Sets
Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?
Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, including OTF (out-the-front) knives and traditional switchblades, are legal for most adults to own and carry, subject to location-based restrictions like schools, secure government areas, and other posted spots. The old ban on switchblades is gone; what matters now is where you bring the knife and how you use it. If you’re carrying an OTF knife in Texas, treat it like any other serious blade: respect posted signs, mind blade length in sensitive locations, and keep it holstered or clipped until you need it.
Where does this throwing knife set make sense in Texas?
This three-piece throwing knife set earns its keep on private Texas property: ranches outside Kerrville, lease land in the Panhandle, backyards in Midland with enough room to stretch a target away from the fence. It’s also at home in gear bags headed to private ranges or throwing clubs that welcome fixed-blade practice. Anywhere you’ve got a safe backstop and no neighbors at risk, these knives bring structure to an evening that might’ve just been another night in front of a screen.
How do I know this is the right throwing set for me?
If you want a flashy wall piece, look elsewhere. If you want three identical, six-inch, all-steel throwers that can live in a truck, ride on a belt, and hit the same target board week after week, this set fits. It’s for buyers who care more about balance and repeatable throws than about mirror polish. If your life already includes fence lines, pasture gates, or a stretch of gravel where you can pace off ten yards in peace, this is the kind of straightforward steel you’ll actually use.
Built for Texas Nights When the Work Finally Stops
Picture a still August evening outside a small town north of Waco. The air’s thick, the cicadas are loud, and there’s just enough light left to see the board propped against a hay ring. You pull the sheath, unsnap the flap, and three black blades slide into your palm, cool despite the heat. You walk off your distance on cracked ground you know by feel, turn, and send the first knife. It bites clean. By the time the third hits, the rest of the day is gone.
This is what the Midnight Warrior Throwing Knife Set - Black Steel is for. Not for show. Not for a glass case. For Texans who measure their gear in seasons of dust, missed throws, and the solid thud of steel finding wood after a long day.
| Overall Length (inches) | 6 |
| Blade Color | Black |
| Blade Finish | Matte |
| Blade Style | Spear Point |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Blade Material | Steel |
| Handle Finish | Matte |
| Handle Material | Steel |
| Theme | Tactical |
| Set Count | 3 |
| Sheath/Holster | Nylon sheath |