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Red Dragon Dual Spring-Assisted Knife - Black Aluminum

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9.99


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Inferno Warden Dual-Blade Assisted Knife - Black Aluminum

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/7595/image_1920?unique=5c78fa9

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Texas brass knuckles may get the headlines, but Texas collectors know a bold assisted knife belongs in the same display. The Inferno Warden Dual-Blade Assisted Knife pairs twin matte black dagger blades with a red dragon handle that looks like it stepped out of a dark fantasy. Dual spring-assisted deployment, stainless steel blades, and a black aluminum handle make it a dependable, dramatic pocket piece for the Texas buyer who already knows their law and buys with quiet confidence.

9.99 9.99 USD 9.99

MCA004BR

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

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Texas Blades, Texas Brass Knuckles, Texas Law

In Texas, when folks look up Texas brass knuckles, they’re really asking one thing: does this state back my right to own what I collect? Since September 2019, Texas law has been clear on brass knuckles. That same legal confidence spills over into how serious Texas buyers choose their knives, display pieces, and every pocket tool that sits beside those knuckles in a collection.

The Inferno Warden Dual-Blade Assisted Knife belongs in that world. It’s built for the Texas buyer who already knows the law, already knows brass knuckles are legal here, and wants a dual-blade assisted knife that earns its place next to those Texas brass knuckles on the shelf.

Texas Brass Knuckles Culture and the Role of a Dual-Blade Knife

Texas brass knuckles law changed the landscape in 2019. Once they came off the prohibited list in Penal Code 46.01 updates, collectors stopped hiding and started curating. Cases that once held a single folding knife now carry rows of Texas brass knuckles, matched with blades that fit the same attitude: legal, deliberate, unapologetic.

This dual spring-assisted dagger sits right in that lane. Two opposing matte black blades, 1.75 inches each, snap out with assisted speed. The handle carries a full red dragon graphic, more dark legend than porch cowboy. It’s not a casual ranch utility piece. It’s a collector’s knife that looks right sitting alongside blacked-out Texas brass knuckles, matched in color, matched in intent.

Material and Build: Stainless Steel Blades, Black Aluminum Backbone

A Texas collector doesn’t just ask if something looks mean. They ask what it’s made of. Here, both dagger blades are stainless steel, finished in a matte black that cuts glare and fits the darker fantasy theme. Stainless brings the corrosion resistance you expect when a knife might ride in a truck, a pocket, or a range bag in Texas heat and humidity.

The handle is black aluminum, contoured with finger grooves and aggressive lines. Aluminum keeps the weight down while staying rigid under torque. The matte handle finish pairs cleanly with the black blades, so the red dragon artwork becomes the focal point without cheap shine or toy-like gloss. A liner lock anchors each blade in place, and the pocket clip lets this piece ride discreetly until it’s time to show it.

Texas Conditions, Texas Expectations

Texas buyers know their gear sits in hot vehicles, dusty glove boxes, and sometimes on an outdoor table at a backyard cookout. Stainless steel blades and aluminum handles handle that kind of life. This isn’t a safe queen that falls apart outside the air conditioning. It’s a fantasy-leaning knife built on work-ready materials.

Texas Carry Context: Where This Dual-Blade Fits

After Texas brass knuckles became legal, a lot of people widened their collections and their carry. Assisted opening knives like this one fit naturally into that expanded attitude: legal tools and showpieces, carried or displayed with intent. Dual blades make this more of a statement piece than a minimalist EDC, but the pocket clip and 6-inch closed length mean it still fits standard Texas pocket carry habits.

The twin dagger layout isn’t for opening feed bags or breaking down boxes all day. It’s for the collector who wants a dramatic assisted knife to pair with their Texas brass knuckles, something that deploys fast, looks fierce, and reminds them why they started collecting in the first place.

Texas Collectors and Everyday Pocket Use

Plenty of Texans carry a straightforward utility folder for chores and keep bolder knives and brass knuckles in the collection. This knife can cross that line when needed. Spring-assisted deployment gives quick, one-handed opening. The plain edges will handle basic cutting tasks. But its real job is to stand out when you lay your gear on the table with friends who know Texas law as well as you do.

Design Story: Red Dragon Over Black Steel

The first thing anybody notices on this piece is the artwork. A bright red dragon stretches across the black aluminum handle, wings flared, set against twin black blades. The color palette is simple: red over black, no polite middle ground. It speaks the same language as blacked-out Texas brass knuckles sitting in a case—minimal color, maximum intent.

The curved profile and hooked dagger tips sharpen that impression. Decorative cutouts near the blade bases add a hint of flame and motion, echoing the dragon theme. Finger grooves and sculpted lines give the handle a secure, knuckle-like grip, a quiet nod to the same ergonomics that make Texas brass knuckles such strong hand-filling tools.

Fantasy, Gaming, and Texas Display Cases

Plenty of Texas buyers came to blades and brass knuckles through fantasy, gaming, or anime before they ever handled a stockman or a trapper. This knife respects that path. It looks like it could have been pulled out of a game inventory, but it’s built in real steel and aluminum, not plastic cosplay. It’s the piece that bridges that fantasy past with a grown Texas collection built on lawful ownership and deliberate taste.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles have been legal to own in Texas since September 2019, when changes to Texas Penal Code 46.01 and related sections removed knuckles from the prohibited weapons list. Texas brass knuckles buyers aren’t guessing anymore—the law is settled. That’s why this site speaks directly to Texas, not to other states’ nervous disclaimers.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

In Texas, once knuckles came off the prohibited list, lawful adults gained clear room to own and carry them. As with any item, actual use is governed by the same assault and weapons misuse laws that apply to everything else. Texans carry brass knuckles and knives with the understanding that the tool itself is legal, but criminal conduct never is. Public versus private carry comes down to context, intent, and existing Texas weapons and self-defense statutes.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best brass knuckles for a Texas buyer balance three things: solid metal construction, clean machining with no weak points at the finger bridges, and a finish that matches the rest of your collection—often black, brass, or muted colors. Texas brass knuckles buyers tend to match their knuckles with blades: black aluminum handles with black steel, or raw brass with polished steel. A dual-blade assisted knife like the Inferno Warden pairs naturally with blacked-out knuckles for a unified Texas display.

Texas Collector Identity and the Inferno Warden

Texas brass knuckles law in 2019 didn’t just legalize a tool; it confirmed a culture. Texans who already knew where they stood with the law now had the code to back it. That same mindset drives how they pick every piece that sits beside those knuckles—a knife like this dual-blade dagger, chosen for its materials, its design, and the way it fits a Texas collection.

The Inferno Warden Dual-Blade Assisted Knife is for the Texas buyer who doesn’t need convincing that brass knuckles are legal here, doesn’t need a lecture about other states, and doesn’t waste time on flimsy builds. Stainless steel blades, black aluminum handle, assisted deployment, and a red dragon that looks right at home next to Texas brass knuckles—that’s the pitch. Plain, specific, and aimed squarely at the Texas collector who already did the homework and just wants gear that lives up to it.

Blade Length (inches) 1.75
Overall Length (inches) 9.5
Closed Length (inches) 6
Blade Color Black
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Dragon
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted