
I don’t leave the house without a blade. Not for opening boxes — I’ve got a dozen knives for that. This one rides on my belt for the same reason my pistol does. And after a few weeks of daily carry, gym sessions, and runs around the neighborhood, the AMTAC Blades Tyrant has earned a permanent slot in my EDC.
Here’s the problem it solves: a folding knife requires fine motor skills to deploy, and fine motor skills are the first thing to go when your heart rate spikes and someone is inside arm’s reach. I used to run with a folder clipped to my waistband. Under real stress, I’m not confident I could get it open in time to matter. A fixed blade removes that failure point entirely — but most fixed blades are too big, too heavy, or too poorly sheathed to actually carry every day.
The Tyrant fixes all three.
What Makes a Fighting Knife
The Tyrant was built around a short list of non-negotiables that Kyle Defoor — who I’ve trained with, and whose combatives background spans decades — lays out for a purpose-built defensive blade.
A point that penetrates
The Tyrant runs a symmetrical spear point that puts every ounce of energy into a single point of impact. That matters because a defensive thrust from a reverse grip may need to defeat a leather jacket, a zipper, or layered clothing before it ever reaches the threat. Tantos and clip points bleed energy off at those angles. A needle-like spear point doesn’t.
A handle that indexes itself
The blade’s centerline runs dead through the middle of a flat handle. Grab it in a reverse grip without looking and the edge is already aligned with your knuckles. The butt of the handle also allows you to cap it with your palm on a thrust, which keeps your hand off the blade and drives every bit of force forward into the tip.
A sheath you’ll actually live with
This is where most fixed blades die. Doesn’t matter how good the steel is if the carry system is bulky, prints, or rattles loose — it ends up in a drawer. The Tyrant ships with a minimalist belt sheath running a Discreet Carry Concepts Mod-3 clip that mounts to a belt or straight onto clothing. The sheath is ambidextrous, too: the blade locks in securely when inserted from either side.
A 2.5-Inch Blade Is Enough — If You Know Anatomy
The most common pushback I hear on small fixed blades: “That blade’s too short to do anything.” That’s a training problem, not a blade problem.
When you have a beat to place a deliberate strike, the targets that stop a fight on a timer are the carotid, the femoral, and the heart. The first two run shallow — well within reach of the Tyrant’s 2.5-inch spear point. The heart takes more depth to reach, which is exactly why it sits last on the priority list.

The more likely scenario is reactive: a threat already on you, inside what Defoor calls the reactionary gap. You’re not placing surgical strikes there — you’re attacking the weapon arm to shut it down and create space. A drive into the lateral neck or the shoulder-armpit junction disrupts the brachial plexus, kills grip strength, and breaks the mechanics of the attack.
From a forward grip at contact distance, both of those zones are directly in front of you, and the Tyrant’s geometry handles either job without needing another inch of steel.
Concealed Carry, Blade Steel, and Weight
The blade is MagnaCut — the modern powder-metallurgy stainless that’s become the benchmark for balancing toughness, edge retention, and corrosion resistance. That last one matters more than you’d think for a knife that lives against your body through Ohio summers and sweaty runs. At 5/32″ thick and 3 ounces, it’s stout without being a brick. The sheath adds 0.8 ounces. On the belt or clipped directly to a pair of running shorts, it’s simply not there until you need it.
I carry mine IWB, opposite my appendix-carried pistol. Inside the reactionary gap, a fixed blade in reverse grip gets into the fight faster than a pistol can clear the holster and present. Defoor puts it plainly: At contact distance, the blade beats the gun. Carrying it on the support side means both tools are accessible at once — the blade creates the space, controls the weapon hand, or buys the second I need to get to the gun or get gone.

For runs, beach days, or anytime I’m in shorts and a t-shirt (or no shirt), AMTAC offers a horizontal deep-concealment sheath as an add-on. It genuinely disappears. The trade-off is a different draw stroke than the vertical belt sheath.

Bottom Line
The Tyrant is a specialist. It exists for the close-contact problem — the attack that’s already happening, at a range where drawing a pistol isn’t an option yet. It’s light enough that you’ll never talk yourself out of carrying it, small enough to vanish under a t-shirt, and designed by people who’ve spent careers thinking about this exact fight.
Buy it and the trainer. Put the reps in. Then carry it every single day.
Specs
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Steel | CPM MagnaCut |
| Blade length | 2.5″ |
| Blade thickness | 5/32″ |
| Overall length | 6″ |
| Blade weight | 3 oz |
| Sheath weight | 0.8 oz |
| Included | Minimalist belt sheath, aluminum training blade, storage sheath |
| Optional | Horizontal deep-concealment sheath |
Available direct at amtacblades.com
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