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Reaper Mark Four-Point Throwing Star Set - Black

Price:

13.99


Reaper Tri-Edge 3-Piece Throwing Star Set - Midnight Black
Reaper Tri-Edge 3-Piece Throwing Star Set - Midnight Black
16.99 16.99
Skullmark Balanced Quad-Point Throwing Star Set - Silver
Skullmark Balanced Quad-Point Throwing Star Set - Silver
13.99 13.99

Night Reaper Skull-Marked Throwing Star Set - Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5484/image_1920?unique=bf09136

6 sold in last 24 hours

Heat’s fading off a dry lot behind the shop and the targets are already chewed up. This throwing star set leaves your hand clean and tracks straight, four-inch steel crossing the gap before you even hear it. Three matching skull-marked stars ride in a fitted sheath, low-glare black, balanced for repeat throws. Easy to stock, easy to teach, they turn casual curiosity into that next tight grouping.

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Skull-Marked Control for Texas Backlot Practice

Late light on a gravel lot behind a metal building, plywood targets leaned against an old cable spool. That’s where this skull-marked throwing star set makes sense. Three four-point stars, each about four inches across, ride light in a fitted sheath until it’s time to send them across the gap. No shine, no flash—just a low-glare black finish and a clean X profile that feels right the second it leaves your fingers.

Balanced Four-Point Throwing Stars Built for Texas Repetition

These aren’t costume props. Each throwing star is cut from a single piece of metal, four leaf-shaped arms radiating from a center cutout that locks your grip the same way every throw. The four points share weight evenly, so when you stand twenty feet off a scrap of OSB or an old hay bale, the flight stays honest. Once you find the rotation that fits your hand, the set rewards you with repeatable sticks instead of wasted throws.

The inner edges stay smooth; the business is at the tips. That gives you secure handling when you’re teaching someone new on a quiet stretch of land, while the sharpened points do the work at impact. At roughly palm-width, these stars are big enough to track in low light but compact enough that they don’t drag in the sheath on your belt or in a truck console.

Why This Throwing Star Set Fits Texas Range Culture

Across Texas, there are more improvised backyard ranges than anyone admits on paper. Folks hang old feed sacks from mesquite limbs, prop pallets against fence lines, and turn dead space behind barns into training grounds. That’s the world this three-piece throwing star set belongs in. The low-glare black finish doesn’t catch a floodlight or porch light, so your eye stays on the target instead of a flash of metal.

With three identical shuriken in the sheath, you can work in honest strings: throw, throw, throw, then walk the line to pull them. On a hot Panhandle day or under Hill Country stars, the matched weight and feel keep your focus on distance and rotation instead of fighting inconsistent gear. You’re not juggling different sizes, you’re refining one set of mechanics until the motion becomes second nature.

Texas Buyers, Thrown Weapons, and the Law

Not every buyer who walks into a Texas shop is clear on what’s allowed, especially with anything that looks like a weapon from a movie. State law treats throwing stars differently than knives carried for everyday use. Where a Texas OTF knife might ride in your pocket from Amarillo to Brownsville without issue under current law, shuriken live in a different lane: they’re made for controlled environments—ranges, private land, training spaces—not casual street carry.

Understanding Texas Context for Throwing Stars

In practice, that means these stars fit best in the same places you’d sight in a new rifle or run drills with training blades: out on private property, at a dedicated range, or anywhere local rules allow target work. They’re not built for belt carry into town or tossed loose into a bag headed to a stadium or bar district. A Texas buyer who respects the same common-sense lines they follow with firearms and more aggressive blades will find an easy place for this set in their kit.

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

On hard-packed caliche, dusty grass, or the bare concrete pad behind a workshop, your gear takes hits even when you don’t miss. These throwing stars answer that with simple, durable decisions. The single-piece construction shrugs off the kind of edge nicks and flex that would ruin cheaper laminated blades. The skull motif is etched into the finish, not painted on, so it won’t flake off the first time you miss low and clip a rock or T-post.

The fitted sheath gives each star its own pocket. On a long practice run outside Lubbock or down by the Coast, you don’t want steel edges riding against each other in a loose pouch, dulling tips before they ever reach a target. The sheath keeps the points separated and makes it easy to re-holster by feel alone when you’re talking a student through their next throw.

Night Practice on Texas Lots and Back Fields

In much of the state, the only real time you get to yourself is after sundown. That’s when the low-glare finish earns its place. Under a yard light in San Angelo or behind a warehouse in Pasadena, these stars stay muted in your hand. You see the silhouette and the skull marks, not a blinding reflection. If you’re working from ten, fifteen, twenty yards, that little bit of visual control helps you track rotation in the air and read what went right or wrong on a throw.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Star Sets

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Modern Texas law is friendly to most automatic blades. A true OTF knife with a standard-length blade can usually ride in your pocket or on your belt statewide, with location-based exceptions like schools, some government buildings, and certain posted venues. Throwing stars fall into a different category; they’re best kept as range and private-land tools, not town carry. When in doubt, check current state statutes and any local rules before you leave the house with specialty gear.

Is this throwing star set better for display or real practice?

This set is built for real practice. The roughly four-inch diameter, central finger cutout, and evenly spaced four-point design all favor controlled throwing over wall display. The skull graphics carry the attitude, but the balance, low-glare black finish, and single-piece metal construction make more sense on a plywood backstop in a side yard than hanging under glass.

How should a Texas buyer store and transport these stars?

Think of them like you would a compact training blade or unloaded handgun headed to a range. Keep them in the fitted sheath, stowed in a bag, range case, or glove box when you’re moving between home and practice ground. On your own property or a friend’s place outside city centers, they can live in a truck door pocket or shop drawer, sheathed and ready. Around town, it’s smarter to treat them as sporting gear, not daily carry.

End of a long week, air still warm over a cracked driveway on the edge of a Texas town. You step off fifteen paces, slide one of these skull-marked shuriken from its sheath, feel the center cutout settle between your fingers. The throw is quiet, the flight straight, the impact a clean, solid thud on the board. Three stars in rotation, dust under your boots, nothing else to think about but distance and spin—that’s where this set earns its place.

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