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Super Saiyan Surge Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Orange

Price:

10.99


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Saiyan Surge Anime-Assisted Folding Knife - Orange Blade

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/6585/image_1920?unique=266ddd3

5 sold in last 24 hours

August heat rolling off a Dallas parking lot, you thumb the flipper and this anime-charged assisted knife snaps open like a power-up sequence. The 3.25-inch orange 440C clip point bites clean through tape, straps, and roadside fixes, while the Super Saiyan artwork turns a tool into a statement. Liner lock holds solid, pocket clip keeps it riding ready on your jeans or in the truck. Bright, fast, and unapologetic—built for Texans who don’t hide what they carry.

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Anime Power in a Texas Pocket

Walk out of a late-night show in San Antonio, summer air still sitting heavy, and you feel that familiar weight in your pocket. One thumb on the flipper, and this anime-charged spring-assisted knife jumps to life. The orange blade snaps out fast, more power-up than pocketknife, but it cuts like something made for work, not cosplay.

The Saiyan Surge Anime-Assisted Folding Knife brings that bright, high-energy style into a tool you won’t mind scraping through boxes in a Fort Worth warehouse or trimming nylon rope at a Hill Country campsite. It looks like it belongs on a poster, but it works like it belongs in your hand.

Why This Assisted Knife Fits Texas Everyday Carry

Texas carry culture is simple: if you’re going to clip something in your pocket every day, it needs to earn the space. This isn’t a drawer queen. The 3.25-inch matte orange 440C stainless clip point comes out quick with a spring-assisted snap, then settles into a grip that feels right when you’re cutting down shrink-wrap in a Lubbock shop or slicing cord at a backyard cookout in Katy.

The printed aluminum handle carries the Super Saiyan-style artwork without adding bulk. At about eight inches open, it fills the hand but still folds down easy into a front pocket or rides low inside a truck console. Thumb jimping on the spine gives you traction when your hands are slick from sweat or oil. It’s anime on the outside, Texas practical in the details.

Legal Confidence: Assisted Knives and Texas Knife Laws

Texas doesn’t get fussy about knives the way some states do. Under current Texas law, assisted-opening knives like this are legal to own and carry for most adults. They’re not treated like restricted switchblades anymore. The key point is blade length and where you’re carrying.

With a blade just over three inches, this assisted folder stays well inside the limits for most everyday situations—whether you’re walking into a feed store in Abilene or heading into a buddy’s garage in Round Rock. Certain places in Texas still have restrictions on larger blades and so-called “location-restricted knives,” but this knife doesn’t fall into that category. As always, know your local rules, but for day-to-day pocket carry, this format plays it safe while still giving you fast deployment.

Texas Carry Reality: From Truck Console to Arena Parking Lot

In Texas, a knife usually lives in one of three places: front pocket, work bag, or tucked in the truck. The low-profile pocket clip on this assisted knife lets it ride along the seam of your jeans without chewing up the fabric. Slip it into your back pocket when you’re headed into a Houston game, or tuck it behind registration in the glove box before you walk into a courthouse or school zone where knives aren’t welcome.

The bright orange blade also has its place. Drop it in dry grass outside Midland and you’ll still see it. That color isn’t just style—it makes the knife easy to find when it falls off a tailgate or gets set down on a dark workbench.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Anime-Assisted Alternative

If you’re the kind of Texan who usually goes hunting for an OTF knife, this spring-assisted blade sits in a familiar lane: one-handed, fast, and built for repeat flicks. The difference is the hardware. Instead of a double-action slider, you’ve got a flipper tab and spring assist doing the work.

The action is clean. Press the tab and the blade drives open with a sharp, confident kick. Liner lock drops into place without needing a second thought. For the same crowd that likes an OTF knife in Texas—fast access in a San Angelo shop, quick cut in a Panhandle windstorm—this assisted folder delivers similar speed with a different mechanism, and with anime artwork that actually says something about what you like.

Anime, Asphalt, and Everyday Use

The Super Saiyan-style character on the handle isn’t subtle. That’s the point. This is the knife that gets noticed when you loan it across a tailgate in Arlington or flip it open at an Austin LAN party. But once the blade is out, the artwork fades into the background and the edge does what it’s supposed to do.

The 440C stainless steel holds up fine against cardboard, banding, nylon tie-downs, and the odd bit of light yard work. Wipe it down, fold it, clip it, and it’s ready again. The anime theme might pull you in, but the steel and mechanics keep it around.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Pocket Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatic or assisted-opening blades are legal to own and carry for most adults. The old switchblade restrictions are gone. What matters now is blade length and restricted locations. Knives with blades over 5.5 inches fall into a “location-restricted” category and can’t be carried in certain places like schools, polling locations, and some government buildings. This assisted folder sits well under that length, making it a straightforward choice for daily pocket carry across most of the state, as long as you respect posted rules and special locations.

Will this anime-assisted knife hold up as a real Texas EDC?

It will. The printed aluminum handle can stand up to bouncing around a work truck or riding in a backpack through a long day on a San Marcos riverbank. The 440C stainless blade has enough edge retention for everyday tasks—breaking down shipping boxes in a Waco shop, cutting paracord in a garage, or opening feed sacks in the shade of a barn. It’s not a safe-queen collectible. It’s a working blade with artwork.

How does this compare to a Texas OTF knife for speed and control?

A Texas OTF knife shoots straight out the front with a button or slider. This one uses a flipper and spring assist, but the end result is similar: fast, one-handed deployment that doesn’t care if you’re standing in a Plano office or knee-deep in mesquite cuttings outside Kerrville. Some buyers prefer the more mechanical feel of an OTF. Others like the familiar folding profile of an assisted knife. If you want anime style, quick action, and a legal, easy-carry format, this assisted folder hits the mark without the extra moving parts of an automatic.

Built for the First Flick in Real Texas Heat

Picture an August afternoon, sun dropping behind the live oaks outside New Braunfels. You reach into your pocket, feel the smooth printed scales, and flick the flipper. The orange blade snaps open, bright against the fading light, and you’re cutting rope off a cooler or tape off a box before anyone else has even dug for their keys.

This anime-assisted knife doesn’t ask you to choose between style and function. It just rides along, pocket-clipped against denim or tossed in the console, waiting on that next small job that always seems to show up in this state—on ranch land, in strip malls, under stadium lights. First flick, clean cut, solid close. That’s how a Texas knife ought to work, even when it looks like it stepped off a screen.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.58
Weight (oz.) 4.67
Blade Color Orange
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 440C Stainless
Handle Finish Printed
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Goku
Safety Liner lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock