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Viper Empress Anime Assisted Opening Pocket Knife - Black Graphic Steel

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7.50


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Serpent Empress Fantasy EDC Knife - Black Graphic Steel

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/5934/image_1920?unique=abb6da8

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This Serpent Empress fantasy EDC rides that edge between anime art and real-world function. Spring-assisted, liner lock, and an 8-inch overall profile give you quick, reliable deployment, while the black graphic steel blade and matching Boa Hancock skull handle art mark it as a true collector’s piece. Pocket clip keeps it ready, not rattling in a drawer. For Texas buyers, it’s a bold, working assisted opening knife with convention-floor looks and everyday utility built into the steel.

7.50 7.5 USD 7.50

PF62A

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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
  • Lock Type

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Texas Brass Knuckles, Texas Blades, and the Collector Who Knows the Difference

Texas brass knuckles buyers are the same Texans who notice a knife like this Serpent Empress fantasy EDC the moment it hits the table. You already know brass knuckles are legal in Texas since 2019 under the Penal Code 46.01 change. You know where the line is, and you buy inside it, on purpose. This assisted opening pocket knife lives in that same mindset: legal, intentional, and built for the Texas collector who doesn’t confuse cheap flash with real function.

Texas Brass Knuckles Culture, Texas Knife Taste

Texas brass knuckles collectors didn’t appear overnight in 2019. They were already here, watching the law, waiting for the Penal Code to catch up. When it did, they brought that same precise eye to every other tool they carry. That’s where a piece like this Serpent Empress Fantasy EDC Knife – Black Graphic Steel fits in: not as a toy, but as a graphic-heavy folder that still clears the basic standards a Texas buyer expects.

You’re looking at an 8-inch assisted opening knife with a 3.5-inch black graphic steel blade, Boa Hancock anime styling on the handle, skull art echoing down the blade, and a liner lock that actually does its job. It’s loud on the surface, but underneath it’s a straightforward spring-assisted pocket knife meant to open clean and lock solid.

Texas Brass Knuckles Law, Texas Knife Law: Knowing Where You Stand

Texas brass knuckles went from prohibited weapon to perfectly legal in September 2019 when Penal Code 46.01 and related sections were updated. That change opened up a legitimate market for Texas brass knuckles, not just novelty imports sitting in gray areas. The same Penal Code framework also lays out how Texas treats knives, from everyday pocket folders to longer blades.

Texas Carry Context: Folders and Assisted Opening

An assisted opening folder like this Serpent Empress operates on a spring-assisted mechanism: you start the motion with a flipper tab, the spring completes it. It’s not an automatic in the old sense, and for Texas buyers who actually read the law, that distinction matters. You’re carrying a folding pocket knife with a liner lock and a pocket clip, not a switchblade stashed up a sleeve.

Texas Places, Practical Sense

Texas law is friendlier to knives and brass knuckles than most states, but every serious collector knows there are still lines: schools, secure facilities, and places where security rules beat hobby talk every time. The smart Texas buyer treats this knife the same way they treat Texas brass knuckles: legal by statute, carried with enough common sense not to invite the wrong sort of conversation.

Material and Build: Why This Knife Earns a Spot Next to Texas Brass Knuckles

The Texas brass knuckles collector already understands weight, metal, and what cheap finish looks like after a year in a glovebox. That same eye runs down this blade in a second. The Serpent Empress Fantasy EDC Knife – Black Graphic Steel brings:

  • Blade: 3.5-inch plain edge clip point, black graphic steel
  • Overall length: 8 inches open, 4.5 inches closed
  • Mechanism: Spring-assisted flipper with liner lock
  • Handle: Steel scales with anime Boa Hancock and skull graphic
  • Carry: Single-position pocket clip, tip-down, low-profile ride

That graphic blade isn’t just paint tossed on top; the artwork runs with the line of the steel, keeping the cutting edge plain and usable. Jimping on the spine gives your thumb something to bite into when you actually cut with it, not just stare at it under a display light. The handle art—anime empress, roaring skull, streaks of red, blue, and purple—makes it clear this is fantasy-forward, but the all-steel construction still holds up under real pocket time.

Texas Brass Knuckles Buyers, Texas Display Cases

Texas brass knuckles collectors don’t just buy one piece and quit. They build out trays, shadow boxes, and top drawers with a through-line of personality: Texas-legal, metal-forward, and unapologetically bold. This Serpent Empress fantasy assisted opening knife belongs in that same case. It’s the anime-and-skull counterpart to polished brass, a visual break on the shelf that still fits the story: Texas buyer, Texas law, metal in hand.

The skull graphic on the black blade mirrors the skull by the pivot on the handle, tying together the art in a way that reads deliberate, not slapped together. The anime-style warrior empress gives it that convention-floor energy, but the quick-deploy assisted mechanism keeps it grounded as an actual tool. You can cut tape, rope, or cardboard with it, then set it right back next to your favorite set of Texas brass knuckles without feeling like you mixed hobby with costume.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles are legal in Texas. In September 2019, Texas changed its weapons law—specifically the definitions and restrictions around "knuckles" in Penal Code 46.01 and related sections. What used to be a prohibited weapon moved into the same legal space as other everyday defensive tools. That’s why there is now a legitimate Texas brass knuckles market, not just back-room curiosities. This knife doesn’t change that; it simply sits beside that market as another legal, metal-forward piece for the same buyer.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

In Texas, you can lawfully possess and carry brass knuckles as of the 2019 change, but the same common-sense limits still apply: certain secured locations, schools, and controlled environments have their own rules. Texas brass knuckles law doesn’t override those. Seasoned collectors treat brass knuckles and knives the same way—legal overall, but carried with a clear head about location and context.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best brass knuckles to buy in Texas match three standards: they clearly fit the Texas legal definition, they’re built from real metal that won’t fold under pressure, and they come from a seller who talks Texas law the way you already understand it—directly. From there, you build out your personal style: polished brass, coated alloys, or themed designs. A fantasy-forward piece like this Serpent Empress knife fits the same mindset: metal first, artwork second, function always in the frame.

Texas Collector Identity and the Edge of Style

Texas brass knuckles buyers aren’t asking basic legality questions anymore; they settled those in 2019. Now it’s about selection and fit—what belongs in a Texas collection that already respects the Penal Code and leans into the freedom it offers. This Serpent Empress Fantasy EDC Knife – Black Graphic Steel is for that buyer: the Texan who keeps brass knuckles in the display, an assisted opening pocket knife in the pocket, and doesn’t need anyone from out of state to explain what’s allowed here. Texas brass knuckles, Texas blades, one clear standard: legal, metal, and worth the space they take up.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Graphic
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Graphic
Handle Material Steel
Theme Boa Hancock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock