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Battle-Line Mercenary Longsword - Wood Handle

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34.61


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Long March Mercenary War Sword - Brown Wood

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/8618/image_1920?unique=df557ab

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This Long March Mercenary War Sword - Brown Wood is a full-length medieval-style blade built for straightforward work, not wall-hanging drama. At 50 inches overall with a central blood groove and wood handle, it has the reach and balance collectors look for in a practical war sword. The slim sheath keeps it protected between sessions. For a Texas buyer who knows exactly what they’re adding to the rack, this is a clean, functional steel choice with a mercenary’s attitude.

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Long March Mercenary War Sword for Texas Collectors

The Long March Mercenary War Sword - Brown Wood is built with the same attitude as a working blade on campaign: long, lean, and meant to be used. At 50 inches overall with a full-length blood groove and a simple wood handle, it looks like something a mercenary would carry from one hard job to the next. Texas collectors who appreciate straightforward steel will recognize the intent the moment they see it.

Design Built on Reach, Balance, and a Mercenary’s Workload

This isn’t a fantasy wall piece. It’s a practical, medieval-style mercenary sword with lines that make sense when you picture it on a belt, not in a glass case. The straight, tapered blade is long enough to command space, while the central fuller (blood groove) keeps weight reasonable across that full 50-inch profile. That groove also stiffens the blade, giving it the backbone you expect from a war sword silhouette.

The crossguard is plain metal, with a slight curve that nods to European arming and mercenary swords. It’s there to stop a hand from sliding and to catch or deflect, not to show off. The pommel caps the handle with a faceted metal nut, locking the grip and adding just enough counterweight to keep the sword from feeling tip-heavy. It’s balanced the way a working fighter would have wanted it—forward enough to feel its presence, not so far it drags your wrist.

Material and Build: Steel, Wood, and Straightforward Hardware

The first thing you notice on this mercenary sword is how clean the steel looks. The polished silver blade has a smooth finish that shows the fuller clearly down the centerline. There’s no clutter of etching or faux runes—just steel that reflects light and shows off the length of the blade.

The handle is natural brown wood, shaped to sit comfortably in the hand. No plastic wrap, no flashy overlays. Wood warms with use and fits the hand better over time, something Texas collectors who actually handle their swords will appreciate. The crossguard and pommel are metal, finished in silver to match the blade and tie the whole profile together into one continuous line from tip to pommel.

The edge is single-edged, with a thrust-ready tapered point at the end of that straight blade. The geometry reads like a medieval war or arming sword designed to both cut and push through, which fits the mercenary naming cleanly. For a Texas buyer looking for a medieval-style sword that looks like it could have earned its keep, this configuration makes sense.

Sheath and Carry Context for Texas Owners

This Long March Mercenary War Sword ships with a brown sheath that matches the wood handle and keeps the blade covered when stored or carried to and from events or display spaces. The sheath has visible stitching along the edge and a slim profile that tracks the sword’s narrow, thrust-oriented blade.

For Texas collectors who move between home, land, and events, having a sheath is more than a bonus—it’s how you keep steel from biting into anything it’s not meant to touch. Whether you’re transporting this mercenary sword to a property, a private training session, or a reenactment setting, the sheath does the basic job it’s supposed to do: guard the edge, protect the finish, and let you handle the sword more confidently off the rack.

Note that extra shipping may apply to swords because of the length. A 50-inch war sword is long, and the packaging has to match. That’s the tradeoff for owning a full-length medieval-style blade instead of a cut-down or decorative short piece.

Why This Mercenary Sword Belongs in a Texas Collection

Texas collectors tend to separate real-working aesthetics from overdone fantasy, and this piece falls solidly in the first camp. The 50-inch overall length gives it presence on a wall or rack, but the simplicity of the design keeps it honest. It looks like a mercenary’s tool, not a costume prop.

If your collection leans toward medieval steel, this sword fits cleanly alongside arming swords, longswords, and other battlefield-style blades. The wood handle and brown sheath lend it a grounded look that pairs well with leather gear, shields, or armor pieces. It brings a consistent visual language: steel, wood, and work.

This is the kind of sword a Texas buyer adds when they want a long, straight war blade that doesn’t argue with anything else on the wall. It stands out because of its length and clean lines, not because it’s loud. That restraint is part of its value.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles have been fully legal to own and carry in Texas since September 1, 2019, when House Bill 446 changed the law and removed knuckles from the prohibited weapons list in Texas Penal Code 46.01 and 46.05. That change opened the door for a clear, above-board market in Texas brass knuckles—no grey area, no wink and nod. If you’re buying brass knuckles in Texas today, you’re operating in a legal space the state deliberately created.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

In Texas, you can legally carry brass knuckles under current law, whether at home, on your own land, or out in public, as long as you’re not using them in a criminal way or somewhere other serious rules apply (like secured areas, certain private properties, or where posted restrictions are in place). Texas removed knuckles from the “illegal weapon” category; it did not suspend common sense. Treat brass knuckles the way you treat any other legal defensive or collector tool in this state: carry responsibly and keep them out of trouble.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best Texas brass knuckles combine three things: solid metal construction, a fit that locks into your hand without hot spots, and a finish that holds up to Texas use—heat, sweat, and time. Texas buyers usually lean toward full-metal designs with real weight, clean machining, and finger holes that don’t bite or pinch. Whether you lean classic brass, steel, or modern alloys, the priority is the same: quality you can feel and a build that respects the Texas legal clarity you stand on.

Texas brass knuckles, Texas swords, and serious steel all live in the same space here: owned by people who know the law, respect the gear, and prefer straight facts over noise. If that sounds like you, this Long March Mercenary War Sword - Brown Wood earns its place beside the rest of your collection—quietly, and without needing to explain itself.

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