Dragonflare Mythic EDC Spring Assisted Blade - Rainbow Finish
10 sold in last 24 hours
The first time you fire the Dragonflare open, the rainbow steel hits the light like a dragon exhaling skyfire. This spring assisted EDC snaps to attention with a flipper tab and liner lock that feel dialed-in, not gimmicky. A sculpted dragon handle, matching iridescent clip point blade, and low-profile pocket clip make it equal parts display piece and daily carrier. Whether you collect fantasy-themed steel or just want your go-to blade to have some mythic swagger, this one earns a pocket ride.
Dragonflare Mythic EDC Spring Assisted Blade - Rainbow Finish
The first time you kick the flipper tab on the Skyfire Dragon, the blade doesn’t just open — it ignites. The spring assisted action snaps that rainbow clip point into place with a clean, confident lock, and suddenly you’re holding something that feels half everyday tool, half forged legend. The sculpted dragon along the handle catches the light, scales shifting from green to purple to gold as you roll it in your hand. It’s the moment you realize this isn’t background gear. This is the piece you want to pull out when someone says, “Show me your favorite.”
Not a Butterfly Knife for Sale — But Built for the Same Crowd
If you’re the kind of buyer searching butterfly knife for sale or balisong for sale, you’re already tuned into action, balance, and hardware. This Skyfire Dragon isn’t a balisong — it’s a spring assisted folder — but it’s chasing the same energy: fast deployment, visual flair, and steel that actually works when you stop admiring it and start cutting. The community that loves a well-tuned balisong typically also respects a solid assisted opener in the pocket, especially when it brings this kind of style.
Think of it as the EDC you carry when your balisong stays on the desk. You still get the satisfying snap of a clean deployment, the feeling of a dialed-in action, and the pride of owning a piece that looks like it belongs in a collection, not a bargain bin.
Build Quality That Holds Up Beyond the Rainbow
Flashy knives get roasted quickly in the community when the build doesn’t back up the finish. The Skyfire Dragon’s strength starts with full stainless steel construction: stainless blade, stainless handle, stainless liners. That gives you durability and a reassuring weight in hand that feels more like a real tool than a toy. The iridescent rainbow finish is layered over that steel, so the showpiece look rides on a solid foundation.
The clip point blade runs about 4 inches, giving you enough edge for everyday tasks — boxes, nylon straps, light outdoor use — without feeling oversized. The plain edge keeps it easy to maintain and sharpen, and the scale motif pressed into the blade spine adds a surprising bit of traction when you choke up.
Spring-Assisted Pivot and Liner Lock Confidence
Deployment is handled through a spring assisted pivot, tuned for one-hand opening off the flipper tab. There’s no sloppy play when it swings out; it moves in a single, decisive arc and bites into the liner lock. That lockup is what separates a fun novelty from a real EDC — here, the liner engages solidly against the tang so you can put pressure into cuts without worrying about collapse.
For buyers used to balisong pivots and tuned washers, this action will feel pleasantly tight and predictable — not loose or gritty. The spring does the heavy lifting, you just give it a clean press.
Handle Ergonomics and Dragon Grip
The handle curves gently into the palm, with the sculpted dragon body giving you natural traction points along the back and sides. Stainless steel doesn’t have the warm grip of G10 or micarta, but the deep relief of the dragon motif compensates by creating texture where it matters. The result is a handle that stays anchored even when your hands are a bit slick or you’re working at awkward angles.
A tip-down pocket clip rides the knife low, keeping that rainbow finish mostly concealed until you choose to show it. Decorative screws and a sculpted border make the whole handle feel intentional rather than stamped-out.
Collector Energy, Daily Carry Reality
The Skyfire Dragon leans hard into fantasy aesthetics: iridescent rainbow steel, scale patterns, and a full dragon running the handle. That’s collector bait. It’s the kind of piece you drop on the table and watch everyone else reach for. But underneath the spectacle is a straightforward spring assisted EDC with practical specs:
- Approximately 8.5 inches overall, 4.5 inches closed
- 4-inch stainless clip point blade with plain edge
- Liner lock for secure lockup
- Spring assisted, flipper-tab deployment
- Stainless steel handle with sculpted dragon motif
For the display-focused collector, it’s a standout on a shelf of darker, tactical pieces. For the daily carrier, it’s the one you clip into your pocket when you’re fine with a little attention every time you open a box.
Why Balisong and Butterfly Knife Buyers Still Care
People who search buy butterfly knife or hunt down a new balisong for sale are chasing three things: satisfying deployment, visual identity, and honest steel. Even though the Skyfire Dragon isn’t a butterfly knife, it checks those same boxes from a different angle. The spring assisted action gives you that instant, kinetic open. The rainbow dragon theme gives you a strong visual signature. The stainless construction gives you reliable utility.
Maybe your live blade balisong stays in the case, and your trainer lives at the desk for flipping practice. This is the knife that actually rides in your pocket when you head out — the one you don’t mind getting tape residue on, but still enjoy every time you deploy it.
What Balisong Buyers Want to Know
Are butterfly knives legal to buy?
Legality is the top question in the balisong community, and the answer is: it depends entirely on where you live. In the United States, some states treat butterfly knives (balisongs) like standard folding knives, while others classify them as restricted or prohibited weapons.
Generally more permissive or balisong-friendly states (at time of writing) include: Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, and Wyoming — many of these allow ownership and carry of butterfly knives with few restrictions. Always confirm city and county rules, as local ordinances can differ.
States with significant restrictions or bans historically include: California (strict blade length limits and complex carry rules), Hawaii (largely prohibited), New York (heavily regulated, with evolving case law), New Jersey and Massachusetts (often treating balisongs as prohibited or restricted weapons), and some areas of Maryland and Oregon. In these places, simply having a balisong for sale or carrying one can be an issue.
This Skyfire Dragon is a spring assisted folding knife, not a balisong, so it often falls under different laws. However, assisted openers themselves are restricted in some jurisdictions. Laws change, and enforcement can vary, so the only safe play is to check your current state and local statutes — and when in doubt, consult an attorney or official state resources before you buy or carry.
What's the difference between a butterfly knife trainer and a live blade?
In the balisong world, a trainer is built for skill, not cutting. It has the same handle layout and pivot system as a live blade balisong, but the "blade" is a dull bar of metal with rounded edges and usually drilled holes for weight balance. That lets flippers practice openings, rollovers, and aerials without slicing their hands open every time they miss a catch.
A live blade balisong is exactly what it sounds like: a sharpened cutting tool, often with a pointed tip and real edge. It’s meant for both skill and function — you can flip it, cut with it, and carry it as a working knife. The tradeoff is risk: mistakes draw blood, and the consequences of a dropped aerial are very real.
The Skyfire Dragon lives in a different category: it’s a spring assisted folder, not a butterfly knife trainer or live balisong. There’s no two-handle pivot, no bite handle or safe handle, and no need to latch or worry about blade channel clearance. It’s designed for quick deployment and everyday cutting rather than flipping combos, but the same people who love balisong trainers often appreciate a fast, reliably locking assisted folder in their rotation.
Is this butterfly knife good for learning to flip?
This is where clarity matters. The Skyfire Dragon is not a butterfly knife, so it’s not a tool for learning balisong flipping. There are no dual handles, no balisong-style pivots, and no blade channel to work around. If your goal is to learn actual butterfly knife flipping, you want a dedicated balisong trainer for sale — something with a dull blade, proper handle geometry, and hardware tuned for repetitive openings and aerials.
What the Skyfire Dragon is good for is giving you a fast, satisfying deployment and a visually loud piece to carry when you’re not actively flipping. Many in the balisong community keep separate gear lanes: trainers and live balisongs for skill sessions, and a spring assisted EDC like this for daily life. This knife fits squarely into that daily carrier lane.
Where the Collector, the Flipper, and the Carrier Meet
Every knife person eventually figures out which identity shows up most: the collector stacking display pieces, the flipper chasing cleaner combos, or the carrier who just wants a dependable blade with some personality. The Skyfire Dragon doesn’t force you to pick.
As a collector, you get a rainbow-dragon theme that actually feels cohesive — sculpted handle, scale motif on the blade, and full iridescent steel. As a flipper or balisong enthusiast, you get a fast-deploying sidekick for when your trainer goes back in the bag. As a daily carrier, you get a spring assisted folder with real lockup, real edge, and enough mythic swagger to make every cut a little more fun.
Whether you arrived here searching for a butterfly knife for sale, browsing balisong for sale listings, or just looking for an EDC that looks alive in the light — this is where practical steel and fantasy design shake hands.
| Blade Length (inches) | 4 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 8.5 |
| Closed Length (inches) | 4.5 |
| Blade Color | Rainbow |
| Blade Finish | Iridescent |
| Blade Style | Clip Point |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Blade Material | Stainless Steel |
| Handle Finish | Iridescent |
| Handle Material | Stainless Steel |
| Theme | Dragon |
| Pocket Clip | Yes |
| Deployment Method | Spring-assisted |
| Lock Type | Liner lock |