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Apocalypse Vortex Biohazard Throwing Stars - Black & Green Steel

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22.79


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Toxic Vortex Biohazard Throwing Stars - Black & Green Steel

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Texas brass knuckles buyers who also keep a throwing range will recognize the appeal here. This biohazard-themed throwing star set brings six balanced, 4-inch stainless steel blades in high-visibility black and toxic green. The vortex design tracks clean in flight and bites on impact, while the nylon pouch keeps the six-pack tight and ready between sessions. It’s a straightforward, durable throwing star set that fits right in with a Texas-owned collection of legal steel.

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Texas Steel, Texas Law, and the Throwing Range

Texas brass knuckles buyers already live in a state that trusts adults with steel. That same mindset runs through every serious throwing setup on Texas land. These Toxic Vortex Biohazard Throwing Stars sit right beside your Texas brass knuckles and blades as part of a legal, deliberate collection built around skill, balance, and control. No drama. No guesswork. Just steel that flies straight and earns its space in your gear.

Texas Brass Knuckles Culture and the Gear That Sits Beside Them

When Texas brass knuckles became fully legal in 2019, it didn’t just open one product lane. It confirmed what most Texans already knew: the law here respects clear intent and responsible ownership. That same collector mindset drives the demand for clean, balanced throwing stars that perform on private land and controlled ranges. You’re not guessing about legality. You’re deciding what deserves a slot next to your brass knuckles, your folders, and your fixed blades.

This six-piece throwing star set fits that lane. Six-point stainless steel, 4-inch diameter, sharp tips, and a profile that stays visible in flight. Three black stars with toxic green centers, three neon green with black centers. It’s a matched set, not a random pile of steel. Texas collectors notice the difference.

Material and Build: Stainless Steel Built for Texas Conditions

Texas ranges run hot, dry, humid, windy, and everything in between. If steel can’t hold up outdoors, it doesn’t belong in a Texas collection. These throwing stars are cut from stainless steel, giving you corrosion resistance and consistent weight across all six pieces. Each star shares the same six-point geometry with a central circular cutout and biohazard-style vortex design that keeps weight distributed for smooth rotation.

At roughly 4 inches across, these stars hit the middle ground between beginner-friendly size and serious practice gear. The edges focus on sharp points, not razor-thin blades, which is what you want for repeated impacts into wood targets. The profile is flat and clean, with defined points that bite and a face that stays easy to track in flight under range lighting.

High-Visibility Design for Texas Throwing Sessions

Black and neon green isn’t just for looks. On a Texas backstop—weathered plywood, cedar planks, or a dedicated target board—that toxic green jumps out and helps you see your rotation and impact spots from a distance. Under range lights, the alternating black and green stars give you an instant visual cue of what you’ve thrown and what’s still in the pouch.

The biohazard-style vortex at the center isn’t random art. It frames the circular cutout, keeps mass evenly distributed, and gives the whole star a clean rotational line. When you launch, you can read the spin pattern against sky, fence, or board, and adjust your release without guessing. That’s what Texas collectors expect: design that looks sharp and earns its keep in use.

Texas Brass Knuckles Buyers, Carry Context, and Range Use

Texas brass knuckles law changed in 2019, and with it came a wave of buyers who now build out full Texas-legal setups: brass knuckles, knives, and other steel they can own with confidence. Throwing stars sit in a different lane. They’re range and practice tools on private land, ranch property, or controlled spaces, not something you casually carry down the street.

Texas Context: Private Land and Responsible Use

Most serious Texas steel owners already think in terms of where, when, and how they train. These throwing stars belong on your own place, a friend’s property with permission, or any controlled environment where you can set a safe backstop and keep your throws directed and contained. Same discipline you use when shooting, bow hunting, or working a blade on a target. Deliberate, controlled, and respectful of your surroundings.

Range-Friendly Construction and Storage

Each of the six stars rides in a nylon pouch that keeps points separated, edges covered, and transport simple. You drop the pouch in your range bag next to your Texas brass knuckles case, blade roll, or ammo cans and you’re done. No rattling loose in the truck, no chewing up other gear. Nylon earns its place here: light, tough, and easy to replace if you ever run it into the ground.

Collector Value for Texas Steel Buyers

Texas collectors weigh three things: design, durability, and how a piece fits into the larger story of their gear. This set hits all three. The biohazard vortex styling ties directly into the modern tactical and fantasy lane, the stainless build holds up to repeat throws, and the matched black-and-green six-pack looks intentional on a wall rack or in a display case.

For Texas brass knuckles buyers, this set becomes an easy add: you’ve already staked out your lane as a legal, informed owner of impact tools. Throwing stars like these extend that story into skill-based training. Every throw shows your release, your spin, your consistency. The set either improves under your hand or reveals where you need work. That’s the kind of feedback Texas owners respect.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles became legal to own in Texas in September 2019 when the legislature revised Penal Code 46.01 and related sections to remove knuckles from the prohibited weapons list. That change created a fully legal market for Texas brass knuckles, letting adults buy, own, and collect them as part of their everyday carry or display collections. This site speaks directly to that Texas law reality, not to out-of-state restrictions.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

Under current Texas law, adults can lawfully possess and carry brass knuckles, but the same common-sense rules apply that Texas gun and knife owners already follow. Location restrictions, private property policies, and context still matter. Treat brass knuckles like any other impact tool: legal to own and carry, but not a toy and not something you bring into secured or restricted spaces. Responsible Texans already live by that standard.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best Texas brass knuckles share a few traits: solid metal construction (brass, steel, or quality alloy), clean machining with no weak points, and a design that actually fits your hand. Texas buyers tend to favor pieces that can stand up to heat, sweat, and ranch work without flinching. After that, it’s about collection identity—classic brass, modern tactical, or themed designs that match the rest of your steel, whether that’s throwing stars like this biohazard set, folders, or fixed blades.

Texas Collector Identity and the Steel You Choose

Owning Texas brass knuckles and a matched set of throwing stars isn’t about noise. It’s about knowing the law, knowing your tools, and choosing pieces that mean something on your land, in your hands, and in your collection. This six-piece Toxic Vortex set brings balanced stainless steel, high-visibility black and green, and a biohazard design that stands out without trying too hard. For a Texas collector, it’s one more deliberate choice in a lineup built on legal confidence and real-world performance—Texas brass knuckles and steel, selected with both eyes open.

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