Having been an Ninja since the age of 7, I can confirm that it's a Kama. From what I have observed from a lifetime of kung fu theater, they usually use them in pairs. Have a nice day Grasshopper.🙏
You're forgetting the fact that the "weapon" was originally a tool for farming not combat, much like nunchaku (nunchucks), and the kama was more often paired with the 6-8ft length of rope or chain ending with a small weight tied to the kama.
I'm guessing the hole on the "bolt action" knife is like that for cleaning purposes. If the front of the blade was closed off, dirt would get packed in there over time and become hard to get out.
The pin of the Midgards Messer works as an additional lock but basically the only reason for it is the strict German law. Without the pin you are not allowed to carry them around in public. Outside of Germany, I would just leave the pin at home
*_Seemingly over the top at times indeed.. but, Rike has done, and demonstrated some of the most elaborate and legit masterclass of machinery skills in knife design and overall build production to date!!!_*
Just off the top of my head, The kama (鎌 or かま) is a traditional Japanese farming implement similar to a sickle or billhook used for reaping crops and also employed as a weapon. It is often included in weapon training segments of martial arts. Sometimes referred to as kai or "double kai," kama made with intentionally dull blades for kata demonstration purposes are referred to as kata kai. Before being improvised as a weapon, the kama was widely used throughout Asia to cut crops, mostly rice. It is found in many shapes and forms in Southeast Asia[1] and is particularly common in martial arts from Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines. From one or both of these areas, the kama was brought to Okinawa and incorporated into the martial art of te (hand) and later karate (empty hand). It also spawned the use of the kusarigama and the Kyoketsu Shoge.
I’m thinking that hole extends to the front of the messer blade so you have access to the bolt lock in case It were to bend/break in everyday use. You know, you triple lock it and ram it into the wheel of a runaway bus, successfully stopping it right before it plummets off a cliff, but bending the bolt in the process. Second theory is it doubles as a blowgun. Probably both🤷♂️
I got my EXO-K yesterday, ive been flipping the trainer for the a few hours now and im still terrified of the real thing. ive only flipped it for about 5 minutes total. One thing ive noticed, is that open failures are FAR less likely if you utilize the ring to swing the spine around to hit the top/back of your fingers, then back forward to close. it feels like it really likes that extra momentum to fully deploy.
When opening the real deal, just go for it. I use mine for work to cut tape and wrapping on pallets. I made the knife so the button is pressed on my pointer instead of my thumb for my right hand. But I can tell you, I’ve opened that knife a good thousand+ times. Not once have I gotten cut by it. If you go for it and not worry, you’ll never get cut. It’s the closing you want to watch out for. Been stabbed once while closing it and that is because the screw on the blade part came to loose
My personal top ten: 1. S&W Powerglide 2. QuarterMaster General Lee ET 3. Paragon Warlock 4. WE Double Helix 5. Klecker Cordovan 6. Exo/Exo-M/Exo-K Series 7. Wild Steer WX 8. CKRT Snap Lock 9. CRKT Daktyl 10. Gerber Double Down
You should try flipping the button on the exo k and pressing it with your index finger. It’s super easy to swap, don’t have to take anything apart, just unscrew it and flip it. Feels much more natural when deploying
Also roll the whole knife over your hand, your index finger in the ring, let the handle stop on the back of your hand, then whip it back into your palm
I like the Cybertrix a lot. And also the Midgards Messer Carbine- because if you are going to over engineer, at least give one locking option that is a purely static lock (no springs, magnets etc).
I’ve had my exok Karambit for maybe 2months or so and can tell you the way you should whip it is by flipping the entire knife over your hand onto the back of your fingers, then rotate it back. Basically: throw it forward to flip over your hand onto the back of your fingers, then flip it back to the revers grip pose. It all works on its own. Just make sure to not hyper extend your hand. You only need to let the knife go, not go has hands on it.
j'adore le factor winterblade , petit et compact , j'adore son système d'ouverture et sa belle lame , vraiment atypique j'aime beaucoup , belle vidéo et beaux spécimens 👍
16:00 i remember seeing a foldable kama in historical drama,but i guess that was for show. They were more widespread than you may think,with the chain version being the most popular.
If you've ever tried chopping or aggressively cutting with a serrated blade, you'll know that Max Age Draon probably cuts frighteningly well on meat. We think of slashing with serrations, but they do quite well cutting straight down.
I really want a "puzzle knife" now. ie: something from Rike or Snecx with no hardware and you don't need anything other than what's on the knife to disassemble it.
I would love to see them put a Philips head as the end of the pin on that Messer triple lock. Considering it locks in with a bolt style I bet it could be quite good and provide a full handle
This is the second sheep's foot design that I I've seen today that I really do not mind at all .. not a big fan of the sheep's foot but im starting to soften on that outlook
Kama are farming sickles. Yes, in Okinawa, they did become improvised weapons, but, cut the fluff out, Kama are just farming sickles, no different than, well, sickles. Again, in Okinawa, they were used as improv weapons, usually used in pairs. And if we look in Europe, Paulus Hector Mair made a treaty on how to fight with farming sickles (and a scythe, even). So, all that being said, they were not used by the ninja clan Fartsinpantsu or whatever, kama are farming sickles. (everything can be a weapon, too)
With all the random blades I have laying around it’s refreshing to know even though they will never be used they weren’t as big a waste of money as some of these.
I believe the Kama is typically use to hook on peoples joints like the back of the knee and elbow as well as the neck. Areas with lots of important things like ligaments, arteries and little armor.
I used to work at a truck stop, and near the entrance to the truck stop there was a guy that had a couple glass cases with really weird knives and swords in them. They were the most impractical strange-looking bladed things I've ever seen in my entire life, and that's precisely why I always questioned whether I needed them or not!! 😀
I bet that hole goes the length of the blade Incase lint or dirt gets into it the pin can push it out instead of jamming and being a pain in the A to clean out
It's been amazing seeing genuine high end knife companies emerge in China the last few years, with many now making their own designs too. It's easy to forget that the reason Chinese manufacturing was noted for being so cheap and bad for ages was because they basically did their industrialization during the 1980s-00's. Now there's factories with modern machines and people who have years of experience in using them and take pride in their work (getting paid 20x+ an hour more than they were in 1990 helps a ton with that). Early factory made products in western countries including the US were also noted for being consistently low grade for several decades before figuring things out too back in the day, it's just part of the process.
Umm The Lamella doesn't remind you of the CRKT Ritual?? Quick bit of random knife trivia although the Cybertrix knife looks like the Tesla Cybertruck, D Rocket Design MinimalX aka SpaceX, was actually originally designed to be the SpaceX company knife, they even made a second version, the SpaceXI, which had bearings instead of washers.... I only bring it up because it's blade is certainly unique and strange and is in my list of strangest knives LOL
Seems like most if not all of these are specifically designed to get you to buy it first then it might work for its intended purpose of cutting things and then possibly to cut you in some way enough that you put it on a shelf and go out and buy another knife .
Weird knives are not for practical use. Weird. Nice are for injuring people. That's what their uses are for. I like your videos. Keep up the good work lol
The number 3 blade is a Kris blade. They are awesome slicers because no matter how the blade hits its target, it is cutting at an angle. I beleive the Persians (?) invented the Kris blade for battle
wow. thanks for this magical video. i didn´t know there was these strange knives out there. i really loved a lot of them, keep posting these interesting videos! =)
The coin knife is actually a liner lock design, that snap isn't to indicate the blade is open, the lock seems to have lost its tension so pressing it IN from the back should fix the lock (bending it inwards a bit) also, the hole might not be drilled centered with the knob on the blade so its not sitting correctly. Kusarigama, not kama. Yes I am a couch ninja.
Pretty sure anyone with that knife would just use it open as a knife to cut a seatbelt buddy.. you're reaching a little hard there! It might be even more difficult to hold the finger guard open while holding the blade closed against the force simultaneously than it would be to just deploy it and use it the regular way as intended
1:25 hole all the way through is good for cleaning (just like cleaning rifle bore); ordered mine a month or so back; sometimes you just want something whether it makes sense or not (and I did)
That there katsu "edged instrument" thingy I believe very much resembles a ice axe, especially with that point at the end of the handle👍But I have my doubts about it's function as such 🤔😬😉😂😂
Its amazing how many ways the mousetrap has been reinvented with knives today. Its a tool thats been around as long as people have been smart enough to make tools and yet smiths are cranking out new useful designs. That future retro Reich knife looks like a cheese knife or a butter knife, I think thats why it bugs you lol. I dig it. Looks like its a fixed blade made from a solid chunk. I like minimalist designs. Man I got myself real bad with a Gerber Multitool. I was sharpening the blade, and I was going to fold it back into the handle, so I shook it to get the pliers to slide out to unlock the handle... and it slipped through my hand and ran the freshly sharpened blade across my thumb to the bone. Thanksgiving Day.... My dad was furious cus the Lions were about to kick off and he had to take me to the hospital.
Zombie Go Boom did some great things on Kamas it's a traditional wig splitter but you can also use it as a piece of farm equipment for harvesting hypothetical Bushcraft scenario. Consider you have to chop down tons of long grass for building a Wikieup or harvesting sugar cane/ wild rice. The 90° Edge could also be used for a hooking pulling and sawing in self-defense similar to a Karambit or a Saca tripas. Meaning that not only can you get ahold of arteries behind the knee separate tendons and muscles but you can also disembowel sever and decapitate the head. This is a combat tool 1000% and it models the natural flow of a tactical Tomahawk. It'd be great in a combination with blade. You don't have to know all the crazy flow drills in Arnis Kali Silat and Filipino martial arts. Or native American Apache knife fighting. But it might help to get some understanding of combatives there is an instructor that teaches anatomy in a dynamic way when it comes to edged weapons Matei @TRIBE-13. Then you can stop looking at your tool as a wall hanger from the mall, add something that can stop a threat or maybe multiple.
The last blade is used covertly. You sneak up behind the enemy and slash their throat to the bone with it, killing them very quickly and with no noise. That's why the inside of the blade is sharp.
Oknife make a Claw like the Coin Claw but in my opinion much better. I carry and use it every day. It flips out with a wrist flick and has a center button to unlock to flick and close.Super nice Knife and have it on a short lanyard and carry it in that otherwise useless pocket watch pocket on your jeans right pocket. I love that knife!
Last one is a Field Sickle, also called Kama, it is a farmers tool from Japan... or **Cough Cough** A Super cool ninja blade of absolute power **Cough**
I was a 99Zulu Combat Ninja in the Army, keeper of the 4th General Order, and I can tell you, some of the most powerful weapons on earth are flea market ninja weapons. My 7/11 special has 420 confirmed blunt wraps. My mall ninja katana has been used in several combat scenarios and I’ve even used it to get a girlfriend. So to anyone that thinks of making fun of mall ninja or gas station knives should think twice! 💨ninja vanish💨
The "squiggly" Knifeblade is called a "Kris" blade The curves improves the cutting power of draw or push cuts. I'm sure it will leave nasty scars on anyone that it seriously "bites"
Having been an Ninja since the age of 7, I can confirm that it's a Kama. From what I have observed from a lifetime of kung fu theater, they usually use them in pairs. Have a nice day Grasshopper.🙏
You're forgetting the fact that the "weapon" was originally a tool for farming not combat, much like nunchaku (nunchucks), and the kama was more often paired with the 6-8ft length of rope or chain ending with a small weight tied to the kama.
0:30 0
???
I needs it.
@@fireborn.. You pays for it and you gets it.
I'm guessing the hole on the "bolt action" knife is like that for cleaning purposes. If the front of the blade was closed off, dirt would get packed in there over time and become hard to get out.
The pin of the Midgards Messer works as an additional lock but basically the only reason for it is the strict German law. Without the pin you are not allowed to carry them around in public. Outside of Germany, I would just leave the pin at home
*_Seemingly over the top at times indeed.. but, Rike has done, and demonstrated some of the most elaborate and legit masterclass of machinery skills in knife design and overall build production to date!!!_*
Just off the top of my head, The kama (鎌 or かま) is a traditional Japanese farming implement similar to a sickle or billhook used for reaping crops and also employed as a weapon. It is often included in weapon training segments of martial arts. Sometimes referred to as kai or "double kai," kama made with intentionally dull blades for kata demonstration purposes are referred to as kata kai. Before being improvised as a weapon, the kama was widely used throughout Asia to cut crops, mostly rice. It is found in many shapes and forms in Southeast Asia[1] and is particularly common in martial arts from Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines. From one or both of these areas, the kama was brought to Okinawa and incorporated into the martial art of te (hand) and later karate (empty hand). It also spawned the use of the kusarigama and the Kyoketsu Shoge.
bruh
The Cybertrix looks like a futuristic butter knife. Not sure if that was their intention but they succeeded. Pretty cool though.
folding space steak knife, titanium for lightness and strength in "shipping" them to the ISS in sets of 8
Butter knife is EXACTLY what came to my mind when I saw that!
I like the Cybertrix, especially the type II blade.
Bro it’s literally just titanium and m390😂
I’m thinking that hole extends to the front of the messer blade so you have access to the bolt lock in case It were to bend/break in everyday use. You know, you triple lock it and ram it into the wheel of a runaway bus, successfully stopping it right before it plummets off a cliff, but bending the bolt in the process. Second theory is it doubles as a blowgun. Probably both🤷♂️
Some of those Rike knives are just beautiful with their seamless and fluid lines. That Midgard knife is pretty cool too.
The design of that transformer Karambit is flat out absurd. Not at all worth the risk of giving yourself stigmata
It comes with a trainer, be a man! Lol
That bolt action thick one… I kinda want one 😆 I’m sure it costs more than my entire collection combined though.. but neat.
I got my EXO-K yesterday, ive been flipping the trainer for the a few hours now and im still terrified of the real thing. ive only flipped it for about 5 minutes total. One thing ive noticed, is that open failures are FAR less likely if you utilize the ring to swing the spine around to hit the top/back of your fingers, then back forward to close. it feels like it really likes that extra momentum to fully deploy.
When opening the real deal, just go for it. I use mine for work to cut tape and wrapping on pallets. I made the knife so the button is pressed on my pointer instead of my thumb for my right hand.
But I can tell you, I’ve opened that knife a good thousand+ times. Not once have I gotten cut by it. If you go for it and not worry, you’ll never get cut. It’s the closing you want to watch out for. Been stabbed once while closing it and that is because the screw on the blade part came to loose
My personal top ten:
1. S&W Powerglide
2. QuarterMaster General Lee ET
3. Paragon Warlock
4. WE Double Helix
5. Klecker Cordovan
6. Exo/Exo-M/Exo-K Series
7. Wild Steer WX
8. CKRT Snap Lock
9. CRKT Daktyl
10. Gerber Double Down
You have really hit some good ones in the past few days. Excellent slap, no skid, no bounce and excellent sound 10
You should try flipping the button on the exo k and pressing it with your index finger. It’s super easy to swap, don’t have to take anything apart, just unscrew it and flip it. Feels much more natural when deploying
Also roll the whole knife over your hand, your index finger in the ring, let the handle stop on the back of your hand, then whip it back into your palm
Flipping the button to the other side of the knife I meant, just to clarify
I like the Cybertrix a lot. And also the Midgards Messer Carbine- because if you are going to over engineer, at least give one locking option that is a purely static lock (no springs, magnets etc).
I’ve had my exok Karambit for maybe 2months or so and can tell you the way you should whip it is by flipping the entire knife over your hand onto the back of your fingers, then rotate it back. Basically: throw it forward to flip over your hand onto the back of your fingers, then flip it back to the revers grip pose. It all works on its own.
Just make sure to not hyper extend your hand. You only need to let the knife go, not go has hands on it.
The cybertrix low key looks great for food prep lol. Looks like it has a bit of knuckle clearance and a slicy blade for sure
j'adore le factor winterblade , petit et compact , j'adore son système d'ouverture et sa belle lame , vraiment atypique j'aime beaucoup , belle vidéo et beaux spécimens 👍
oui, c'est tres tres bon
16:00 i remember seeing a foldable kama in historical drama,but i guess that was for show. They were more widespread than you may think,with the chain version being the most popular.
That Maxace Batman would be an incredible work knife for someone who cuts a lot of rope. It would be a (dangerously) effective tool 😅
If you've ever tried chopping or aggressively cutting with a serrated blade, you'll know that Max Age Draon probably cuts frighteningly well on meat. We think of slashing with serrations, but they do quite well cutting straight down.
I really want a "puzzle knife" now. ie: something from Rike or Snecx with no hardware and you don't need anything other than what's on the knife to disassemble it.
Actually useful as a gardening tool, the kama/sickle 16:51
I love "Frankenstein." Turns a folder into a fixed blade. Same thing with the Midgard
Sometimes you need your knife a little more.
I love that kris blade. I have seen it a few times now, and it is just cool.
I would love to see them put a Philips head as the end of the pin on that Messer triple lock. Considering it locks in with a bolt style I bet it could be quite good and provide a full handle
"That's what you sound like when you say that by the way" freakin brutal🤣💀love that
Haven't checked prices because I don't want to hate these knives.
I can promise you the most expensive knives on this channel are not in this video. That being said, some of these are definitely expensive.
The spyderco pochi would be a good honorable spot for this list
The only thing the CMP one has wrong is that the tip should end straight forward and not tipped to either way.
yes to a video on Serge's work!
I just want a Lamella so bad. Its one of my grail knives. In plain satin color like shown in the video. I need it in my life
This is the second sheep's foot design that I I've seen today that I really do not mind at all .. not a big fan of the sheep's foot but im starting to soften on that outlook
Love the bat wing blade but I hate frame locks
Thank you for shouting out Jafar! 😂😂 Literally the only thing I can think of when I see that blade!!
Kama are farming sickles. Yes, in Okinawa, they did become improvised weapons, but, cut the fluff out, Kama are just farming sickles, no different than, well, sickles. Again, in Okinawa, they were used as improv weapons, usually used in pairs. And if we look in Europe, Paulus Hector Mair made a treaty on how to fight with farming sickles (and a scythe, even). So, all that being said, they were not used by the ninja clan Fartsinpantsu or whatever, kama are farming sickles. (everything can be a weapon, too)
ninja master level 100 detected.
huh?
@@appv12
I like the carbine lock. Seems fun.
Rike / Declynx Cybertrix best knife i seen since the Kershaw tilt
With all the random blades I have laying around it’s refreshing to know even though they will never be used they weren’t as big a waste of money as some of these.
Batman called and wants his knife back.
Never ceases to amaze me what people will spend their money on 🙉
To date metal complex has cost me about $5000, and relationship issues 10/10 recommend
I believe the Kama is typically use to hook on peoples joints like the back of the knee and elbow as well as the neck. Areas with lots of important things like ligaments, arteries and little armor.
I used to work at a truck stop, and near the entrance to the truck stop there was a guy that had a couple glass cases with really weird knives and swords in them. They were the most impractical strange-looking bladed things I've ever seen in my entire life, and that's precisely why I always questioned whether I needed them or not!! 😀
Love the overbuilt stuff always have. Great video.
Blade shapes: Sheepsfoot, drop point, clip point, tanto, reverse tanto, robot poop etc….
I bet that hole goes the length of the blade Incase lint or dirt gets into it the pin can push it out instead of jamming and being a pain in the A to clean out
It's been amazing seeing genuine high end knife companies emerge in China the last few years, with many now making their own designs too. It's easy to forget that the reason Chinese manufacturing was noted for being so cheap and bad for ages was because they basically did their industrialization during the 1980s-00's. Now there's factories with modern machines and people who have years of experience in using them and take pride in their work (getting paid 20x+ an hour more than they were in 1990 helps a ton with that). Early factory made products in western countries including the US were also noted for being consistently low grade for several decades before figuring things out too back in the day, it's just part of the process.
Robot poop blade 😂😂 , would that be the technical knife terminology ? Laughed way to hard at that one !!!!! Thanks for the comedy MC !!!
I loved the No. 10 knife with a unique lock
And a beautiful No. 5 knife.
As for Knife No. 2, the size of a special coin.
wonderfull collection
Umm The Lamella doesn't remind you of the CRKT Ritual?? Quick bit of random knife trivia although the Cybertrix knife looks like the Tesla Cybertruck, D Rocket Design MinimalX aka SpaceX, was actually originally designed to be the SpaceX company knife, they even made a second version, the SpaceXI, which had bearings instead of washers.... I only bring it up because it's blade is certainly unique and strange and is in my list of strangest knives LOL
Seems like most if not all of these are specifically designed to get you to buy it first then it might work for its intended purpose of cutting things and then possibly to cut you in some way enough that you put it on a shelf and go out and buy another knife .
Every product on earth is designed to get you to buy it.
I have a paragon warlock...its kinda nutty
You slapped that pretty good but we need to get you a heavy boy card so you can slap the ish out of it!
i mean you could use the Kama as a farming tool, like its original purpose
Kind of a waste of time in 2023 don't you think?
That Winter Blade Co. is slick. Strange but super cool!
Weird knives are not for practical use. Weird. Nice are for injuring people. That's what their uses are for. I like your videos. Keep up the good work lol
I had a Gerber Multitool from the 90's that had an impeccable locking mechanism, none today even have.
hahah That folding Karma is cool in a useless sort of way . I love your description
Out of curiosity do you have a triloblade? It's a 3 blade knife all the blades turn into each other in a spiral. Definitely something id look at.
Did he just say “squiggly wiggly robot poop blade”?
i was just thinking, “man, it would be cool if there was a folding flamberge style knife” ….and then you pulled out the CMP
can you make top 10 most functional knife?
You need to check my playlists
That rike is sweet love that Persian blade shape
The Rike Lamella is a great folder and I like trailing point blades 😊
The number 3 blade is a Kris blade. They are awesome slicers because no matter how the blade hits its target, it is cutting at an angle. I beleive the Persians (?) invented the Kris blade for battle
wow. thanks for this magical video. i didn´t know there was these strange knives out there. i really loved a lot of them, keep posting these interesting videos! =)
rike just out here making blade runner knives and i WANT ONE
I have a Kershaw limited edition Ken onion designed blade. It's a spring opener and says 1 of 500.
the first knife, the pin is to stab also, not to lock the blade
The coin knife is actually a liner lock design, that snap isn't to indicate the blade is open, the lock seems to have lost its tension so pressing it IN from the back should fix the lock (bending it inwards a bit) also, the hole might not be drilled centered with the knob on the blade so its not sitting correctly. Kusarigama, not kama. Yes I am a couch ninja.
#6 The Winter Blade Co Factor. When blade is closed but that magnetic bar is up could be an emergency seat belt cutter too.
Pretty sure anyone with that knife would just use it open as a knife to cut a seatbelt buddy.. you're reaching a little hard there! It might be even more difficult to hold the finger guard open while holding the blade closed against the force simultaneously than it would be to just deploy it and use it the regular way as intended
1:25 hole all the way through is good for cleaning (just like cleaning rifle bore); ordered mine a month or so back; sometimes you just want something whether it makes sense or not (and I did)
Kama, the rice cutting tool turned weapon.
Thanks for the vid.
That kama can be devastating in the right trained hands
100% i would use that folding kama for gardening
No9 is Awesome I would love that in my collection 👍✌
The Kama is an extremely useful knife for combat.
That there katsu "edged instrument" thingy I believe very much resembles a ice axe, especially with that point at the end of the handle👍But I have my doubts about it's function as such 🤔😬😉😂😂
1:26 goes all the way through so that it can be cleaned i.e. it can be cleared if something gets stuck inside
Love the coin knife
The Cybertrix is a stunning futuristic beauty. And also could be an useful EDC. Unfortunately is soooo expensive... 😢
The cyber trix looks like a full tage when the blade is out
Those calluses are gnarly. Are you a tradesman by day, knife tuber by night?
Its amazing how many ways the mousetrap has been reinvented with knives today. Its a tool thats been around as long as people have been smart enough to make tools and yet smiths are cranking out new useful designs.
That future retro Reich knife looks like a cheese knife or a butter knife, I think thats why it bugs you lol. I dig it. Looks like its a fixed blade made from a solid chunk.
I like minimalist designs.
Man I got myself real bad with a Gerber Multitool.
I was sharpening the blade, and I was going to fold it back into the handle, so I shook it to get the pliers to slide out to unlock the handle... and it slipped through my hand and ran the freshly sharpened blade across my thumb to the bone.
Thanksgiving Day....
My dad was furious cus the Lions were about to kick off and he had to take me to the hospital.
The parrot Nestor by Daggerr knives... It has the stop pin as well as a liner lock
Zombie Go Boom did some great things on Kamas it's a traditional wig splitter but you can also use it as a piece of farm equipment for harvesting hypothetical Bushcraft scenario.
Consider you have to chop down tons of long grass for building a Wikieup or harvesting sugar cane/ wild rice. The 90° Edge could also be used for a hooking pulling and sawing in self-defense similar to a Karambit or a Saca tripas. Meaning that not only can you get ahold of arteries behind the knee separate tendons and muscles but you can also disembowel sever and decapitate the head. This is a combat tool 1000% and it models the natural flow of a tactical Tomahawk. It'd be great in a combination with blade. You don't have to know all the crazy flow drills in Arnis Kali Silat and Filipino martial arts. Or native American Apache knife fighting. But it might help to get some understanding of combatives there is an instructor that teaches anatomy in a dynamic way when it comes to edged weapons Matei @TRIBE-13. Then you can stop looking at your tool as a wall hanger from the mall, add something that can stop a threat or maybe multiple.
Good lord. Shut up nerd
The last blade is used covertly. You sneak up behind the enemy and slash their throat to the bone with it, killing them very quickly and with no noise. That's why the inside of the blade is sharp.
The hand scythe looks just like a rice scythe and those are used in traditional Japanese martial arts as well as farming.
Oknife make a Claw like the Coin Claw but in my opinion much better. I carry and use it every day. It flips out with a wrist flick and has a center button to unlock to flick and close.Super nice Knife and have it on a short lanyard and carry it in that otherwise useless pocket watch pocket on your jeans right pocket. I love that knife!
I don't think number 3 is cold steel inspired. It looks inspired by an indonesian kris dagger. Those existed long before cold steel was a thing.
I didn't mean that it was inspired by cold steel. It is absolutely modeled after the kris.
@@metal_complex ah ok then i misunderstood it. It's a good video, keep up the great work!
Katsu is used to cut grass, similar form. You sit catch the top of the grass and cut from the bottom part
I'm not an expert, but did you mean "Kama". I think Katsu is a deep fried cutlet.
So the last one is basically a foldable kama which is a traditional martial arts weapon (although usually not foldable like the one shown)
On the topic of gas station knives I used to have an awesome MTech ring knife I’ve been hoping to see someone remake
Last one is a Field Sickle, also called Kama, it is a farmers tool from Japan... or **Cough Cough** A Super cool ninja blade of absolute power **Cough**
The cybertrix is sick
I think number 10 is my favorite so far
I was a 99Zulu Combat Ninja in the Army, keeper of the 4th General Order, and I can tell you, some of the most powerful weapons on earth are flea market ninja weapons. My 7/11 special has 420 confirmed blunt wraps. My mall ninja katana has been used in several combat scenarios and I’ve even used it to get a girlfriend. So to anyone that thinks of making fun of mall ninja or gas station knives should think twice! 💨ninja vanish💨
That pin-lock on the Carbine knife should have been a hand grenade pin.
I love that folding kama would absolutely love it for my collection unfortunately the one i saw was expensive 😢
The "squiggly" Knifeblade is called a "Kris" blade The curves improves the cutting power of draw or push cuts. I'm sure it will leave nasty scars on anyone that it seriously "bites"