Trigger Cataclysm Karambit Style Automatic Dual Action Out the Front Knife
Trigger Cataclysm Karambit Style Automatic Dual Action Out the Front Knife
The ground shakes and opens. Ash-stained rocks splitting with the force of the pressure releasing. The calm right before is the worst. A shaky inhale in the whistling silence and then, in an instant, boom. The red-hot magma is shot hundreds of feet in the air. The mountain breaks, falling rocks litter the slope and crush trees. Then, the shock wave hits. Its quiet for only a moment as the eruption begins until the sound hits. As if the Earth itself is roaring the scream pierces the sky and bends the trees. Lava streams down the mountain for weeks, tucking itself into crevices and dripping off of cliffs. In the aftermath the rock and trees are all burned and greyed. The anger settles itself back beneath the Earth to be built back up for the next cataclysm.
The Trigger Cataclysm Karambit Style Automatic Dual Action Out the Front Knife is an automatic knife with a vivid red blade. This knife is Karambit style which can be seen in the curve of the handle and blade and in the inclusion of a finger hole in the pommel. The handle is black zinc aluminum with carbon fiber inlays which provides a surprisingly cool touch in contrast to the vigorous red of the blade. The blade is a deep red steel blade with geometric arcs mimicking the trail of magma shot from a volcano: up and out. The Trigger Cataclysm Karambit Style Automatic Dual Action Out the Front Knife is an automatic out the front knife which means the blade comes out of the top of the knife as opposed to swinging out of the handle like in switchblades and stilettos. The switch to deploy and retract the blade is at the base of the handle by the finger hole. If you push the switch up, the blade will deploy and if you push the switch down the blade will retract. The Trigger Cataclysm Karambit Style Automatic Dual Action Out the Front Knife comes with it own black nylon sheath with a belt loop for easy carry so a cataclysm is never too far away.