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Galaxy Grip Compact Push Dagger - White Handle

Price:

5.92


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Cosmic Anchor Compact Push Dagger - White Handle

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The Cosmic Anchor Compact Push Dagger locks into your palm like it was grown there. A double‑edged spear‑point blade with a vivid galaxy print pairs with a white textured T‑handle for instant indexing and control in close quarters. Lightweight and low‑profile, it rides unnoticed until you need it. Then the geometry, grip, and balanced profile come together fast. For collectors, it’s a standout cosmic piece. For daily carriers, it’s a dependable backup that doesn’t look like everything else.

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FX641WST

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When a Backup Blade Refuses to Blend In

The first time you close your fist around the Cosmic Anchor Compact Push Dagger, you understand its purpose instantly. The galaxy‑print blade looks wild, but the moment that white T‑handle locks into your palm, it stops being just a pretty piece and starts feeling like a purpose‑built close‑quarters tool. Compact, double‑edged, and planted—this is the kind of backup that disappears on your belt or in your pack until the second you actually need it.

Built for Control in Tight Spaces

This isn’t a display‑only fantasy piece. The double‑edged spear‑point blade is shaped for straight‑line power and minimal snag, while the T‑handle push dagger form keeps the profile tight to the fist. The white handle is more than a visual statement—it’s sculpted and textured so your grip stays indexed, even under stress or with gloved hands.

Textured T‑Handle That Locks Into the Palm

The crosshatch pattern on the handle faces isn’t just cosmetic. That texture bites enough to stop rotation without chewing up your skin. Combined with subtle finger contours, the push dagger settles into a repeatable grip every time you close your hand around it. No hunting for orientation, no guessing which way the blade is pointing—the geometry tells you.

Compact, Symmetrical Double‑Edged Profile

The spear‑point blade is ground on both edges, giving symmetrical penetration and a straight driving line. Three circular cutouts run down the centerline, lightening the blade just enough to keep the overall weight compact without feeling flimsy. The result is a push dagger that feels quick to bring into play but still solid when you lean on it.

Cosmic Style, Real‑World Purpose

The galaxy print finish is what grabs you first: deep blues, purples, and black with star‑like speckles that look pulled straight out of a nebula wallpaper. But under the cosmic theme, you still have a practical defensive shape. The vivid blade contrasted with the crisp white handle makes this push dagger easy to spot in a drawer, bag, or display case, and just as easy to index in low light when it matters.

Collectors get a visual centerpiece that breaks the monotony of plain black tactical gear. Everyday carriers get a compact tool that balances flash with function, the kind of piece that starts conversations at the counter—and disappears under a shirt when it’s time to get on with your day.

Carry‑Focused Design Details

Everything about the form factor was dialed in for close‑quarters control and low‑profile carry. The footprint stays tight, the handle doesn’t print like a full‑size knife, and the double‑edged spear point makes the most of a compact blade length. Whether you stage it on a belt, in a bag, or as a backup in your kit, it’s designed to come into the hand quickly and predictably.

Instant Indexing Under Stress

A good push dagger gives you orientation with zero thought. The white T‑handle on this piece is shaped so that once you grab it, the blade direction is obvious—no need to look, no need to adjust. That’s what makes it useful as a defensive backup: simple, direct, repeatable.

Lightweight, Solid, and Easy to Stage

The compact form and drilled blade keep the weight down, making this an easy addition to a belt rig, range bag, or everyday kit without feeling overloaded. Yet the symmetry and thickness of the blade profile keep it feeling planted and dependable when gripped hard. It’s built to be staged where you can reach it quickly, not buried under a pile of gear.

Why This Piece Belongs in Your Lineup

If your collection runs heavy on folders and full‑size fixed blades, a compact push dagger like the Cosmic Anchor fills a different slot: close‑in control without bulk. The galaxy finish adds a fantasy‑tactical aesthetic that stands out in a case or on a peg wall. The white handle and nebula blade read instantly even from a distance, which makes it a strong retail counter piece as well—eye‑catching enough to pull attention, practical enough to justify the pick‑up.

For new buyers building out their first serious collection, it checks the "I’ve got a push dagger" box with something more interesting than flat black. For seasoned carriers, it’s a low‑cost, high‑impact way to add a backup option where a full‑size blade doesn’t make sense.

What Balisong Buyers Want to Know

Are butterfly knives legal to buy?

Even if you’re here for a push dagger, it’s smart to know the broader knife laws—especially if you also collect balisongs or have a butterfly knife for sale on your radar. In the U.S., knife law is mostly state‑level (and often city‑level) specific. Some states broadly allow butterfly knives and other folders, while others classify balisongs as switchblades or gravity knives and restrict or ban them.

Examples (not exhaustive, always verify current law):

  • Generally more permissive for balisongs: Arizona, Texas, Utah, Florida, Georgia.
  • Restricted or banned balisong possession/carry in many cases: California (length and mechanism limits), Hawaii (bans), New York (case‑specific and evolving), Massachusetts (heavily restricted).

Push daggers can also be regulated separately—some states treat them as "dirks" or "daggers" with their own rules. Before you buy or carry a butterfly knife, balisong, or push dagger, check your state and local statutes, plus any city ordinances. Laws change, and intent (EDC, collection, training) doesn’t override local codes.

What’s the difference between a butterfly knife trainer and a live blade?

In the balisong world, a trainer is a butterfly knife with a blunt, unsharpened “blade” that usually has holes or slots milled into it. It’s all about practicing flipping—fans, rollovers, aerials—without risking deep cuts while you’re learning. A live blade balisong is fully sharpened, ground for cutting, and demands respect every time you open it.

Key differences:

  • Edge: Trainer is dull; live blade is sharp.
  • Use case: Trainer for skill building and freestyle flipping; live blade for cutting tasks, carry, and advanced handling.
  • Safety: Trainers significantly reduce injury while you build muscle memory; live blades should come after you can control openings, closings, and basic tricks cleanly.

This Cosmic Anchor Compact Push Dagger isn’t a balisong, but it often shares pocket space with a butterfly knife in the same kit: flippers run trainers for skill, live balisongs for carry, and a push dagger like this as a tight, controlled backup.

Is this butterfly knife good for learning to flip?

The Cosmic Anchor isn’t a butterfly knife at all—it’s a fixed push dagger—but that distinction matters. If you want to learn butterfly knife flipping, start with a dedicated balisong trainer for sale from a maker you trust. Look for solid pivot hardware, clean handle alignment, and a weight that feels neutral in the hand. Those details are what separate a usable trainer from a clacky novelty.

Use a trainer to build your foundation: basic openings, closings, and simple aerials. Once you’re confident controlling the handles and landing tricks consistently, then step into a live‑blade balisong for real cutting and carry. That’s where material, handle construction, and pivot tuning really show up. A compact push dagger like this one fills a different role entirely: low‑profile defensive control, not flipping. Many in the community carry both—a balisong to flip, and a backup blade to rely on.

Collector, Carrier, or Both—Where This Dagger Fits You

However you come to edged tools, the Cosmic Anchor Compact Push Dagger gives you a distinct slot in your lineup. If you’re a collector, it’s a galaxy‑themed push dagger that stands out from rows of black‑on‑black tactical pieces. If you’re a daily carrier, it’s a compact, controlled backup that stays out of the way until it’s needed. And if you’re part of the balisong and butterfly knife community, it’s the kind of side piece that rides next to your favorite flipper—different job, same respect for design and purpose.

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