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Batwing Dual-Edge QuickDeploy Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum

Price:

9.99


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Midnight Wing Dual-Blade Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/2027/image_1920?unique=f4d1dc3

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Late night on a Houston side street or parked under Friday lights, the Midnight Wing rides easy in the console or pack until it’s time to show off. Twin 2-inch dagger blades snap out with spring-assisted certainty, the gray aluminum handle staying light, low, and solid in hand. It’s more than a display piece—sharp, compact, and ready for small-cut work between the moments when someone just says, “Let me see that thing.”

9.99 9.99 USD 9.99

934SGY

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method

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When Night Work Needs a Little Theater

Door’s open on a San Antonio shop, humidity hanging in the light. Between counting receipts and locking the deadbolt, you’ve still got boxes to break down and straps to cut. You could reach for any old box cutter, but there’s a reason this batwing assisted knife stays in the drawer by the register. Two short dagger blades, spring-assisted, snap out with a crisp, mechanical certainty that makes even routine work feel intentional.

Closed a touch over four inches, it sits flat in a pocket, bag, or truck console, gray aluminum cool against the fingers. Open it stretches to just under seven, twin 2-inch blades extending like wings from the handle. It’s part tool, part showpiece, built for Texans who don’t mind a little drama with their utility.

Why This Dual-Blade Assisted Knife Fits Texas Carry Culture

Across the state—from a Lubbock dorm room desk to a Houston tattoo shop counter—there’s always that one knife people ask about. This is that knife. The bat emblem cut into the center of the handle, the winged profile, the mirrored daggers: it turns heads before you ever touch the flippers.

But under the styling there’s a simple truth. Two plain-edge steel blades give you twice the working edge in a compact footprint. Maybe you keep one edge fresh for clean cuts—tape, envelopes, plastic packaging—and let the other take the rougher jobs in a feed store, pawn shop, or garage. The spring-assisted action sends each blade out with an easy press of its flipper tab, one thumb, no wrestling. In a state where a knife is as common as a key ring, this one earns its spot by working as hard as it looks.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Lure of Fast Steel

Folks who come in asking about an OTF knife in Texas usually want two things: fast deployment and a bit of attitude. This dual-blade assisted knife scratches the same itch for speed and presence, without committing to a full automatic out-the-front mechanism. Instead, you get spring-assisted reliability and that same quick, one-handed snap Texans look for in a Texas OTF knife, wrapped in a design that leans into the night-vigilante, rooftop-silhouette feel.

Set it on a counter in Dallas or Midland and it works like a magnet. Someone will pick it up, find the flipper, and watch both blades flick out in sequence. It’s that same impulse that drives people to buy an OTF knife Texas collectors love—only here, the story is twin daggers, gray aluminum, and a batwing profile that looks just as good on a shelf as it does in a glove box.

Built Light, Sharp, and Ready for Texas Nights

The matte gray aluminum handle keeps weight down, which matters when you’re already carrying a full pocket of keys, wallet, and phone. No pocket clip means it disappears clean into a back pocket, jacket, backpack, or the center console of a ranch truck headed down a caliche road. Aluminum shrugs off sweat, dust, and the everyday grime of a long shift in a Beaumont warehouse or a late-night barback run in Austin.

The steel blades carry a plain edge along a dagger profile, giving you pointed precision for puncturing shrink wrap, blister packs, or heavy tape, and enough straight edge to glide through cardboard and light plastics. At two inches per blade, you’re staying compact—more control, less overkill. In a crowded bar, a campus parking lot, or a cramped stockroom, that shorter reach makes sense. You get the presence of a dramatic fantasy piece with the control of a compact Texas EDC cutter.

Texas Knife Law, Assisted Blades, and Everyday Reality

In this state, knife questions start with the law. People ask if a switchblade or OTF knife is legal in Texas, and these days the answer is simple: Texas law allows automatic and assisted knives, and there’s no blanket ban on switchblades or OTFs anymore. What you still have to mind is blade length and location. Once a knife pushes past five and a half inches of blade, or you carry into certain restricted places—schools, some government buildings, a few posted venues—you’ve crossed into trouble.

How This Dual-Blade Design Fits Texas Rules

This batwing assisted knife keeps both blades at about two inches each, well under that five-and-a-half-inch line Texas knife laws care about. Even with two opposing daggers, you’re still dealing with a compact package that slots comfortably into the "everyday carry" side of the conversation. Spring-assisted action is legal. Folder-style construction is legal. What you choose to do with it—and where you carry it—still calls for common sense.

From Houston High-Rises to Hill Country Back Roads

In a downtown Houston high-rise, this rides quiet in a desk drawer until it’s time to open a shipment or slice down a stack of boxes. Out near Kerrville or Blanco, it lives in a center console or side pocket of a daypack, handling snack bags, cord, and light camp chores back at the cabin. It’s not your fence-cutting, mesquite-clearing workhorse. It’s your sharp little companion for light tasks and late hours, the one that makes people say, “Where’d you get that?”

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About an OTF Knife Texas Shoppers Compare

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas used to treat switchblades and OTF knives as restricted, but that changed. Now, automatic and OTF knives are legal to own and carry in most day-to-day situations across the state. The real limit is blade length and location: once a blade runs over five and a half inches, Texas law treats it as a "location-restricted knife" with rules about where it can go. This dual-blade assisted knife stays well under that mark, so it fits comfortably into typical Texas carry, provided you respect posted notices and restricted places.

Is this batwing assisted knife practical for real Texas use, or just for looks?

It’s both. The design leans hard into fantasy with the bat emblem and mirrored dagger blades, which makes it a strong display or collection piece. But the mechanics and size are grounded in reality: steel plain edges, two inches each, aluminum handle, spring-assisted flippers you can run one-handed. For a clerk breaking down boxes in Waco, a collector in El Paso, or a student cutting tape and cord in a College Station apartment, it’s more than a toy—it’s a compact cutter with a bit of attitude.

How does this compare to buying a full Texas OTF knife for everyday carry?

If you want the purest out-the-front action—a blade firing straight from the handle—then a dedicated OTF knife Texas shops keep in the case is still king. But those typically cost more and feel more specialized. This dual-blade assisted knife lands in a different lane. You still get the quick, one-handed deployment people look for when they buy OTF knife Texas models, but in a simpler, spring-assisted setup with two short daggers instead of one longer out-the-front blade. For many Texans, that balance of show, speed, and price makes it the knife they actually carry, while the premium OTF stays at home.

Night Shift Steel for a Texas Life

Picture the first night you carry it. Maybe you’re parked at a Buc-ee’s off I-35, stretching your legs between San Antonio and Dallas. You reach into the console, feel the cool, flat gray handle, and flip a blade out to slice open a stubborn snack bag or trim a loose strap. Someone at the next pump notices the twin daggers and the bat in the middle and asks to see it. You hand it over, watch them work the flippers, see the grin when both blades lock out.

That’s how this knife fits here. Not as a showpiece trapped in a box, but as a compact, sharp, slightly theatrical tool that lives in the same Texas as you do—under parking lot lights, in truck cabs, on cluttered counters, doing small jobs with a look that says you could have picked any blade, but chose this one on purpose.

Blade Length (inches) 2
Overall Length (inches) 6.875
Closed Length (inches) 4.05
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Bat-inspired
Pocket Clip No
Deployment Method Spring-assisted