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Product Description
If you can precision machine a heavy duty folding knife, then why not precision machine a tactical pen. Rike Knife did, and it’s here in nine different striking colors Read More
Tactical pen? Hmmmm, I wonder when's the last time someone here truly needed to plunge a pen in an bad guy's carotid in order to escape from harm or death?
What else a tactical pen would be used for then, if not for that?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJuZz17o35U
Damn, I really like this pen, but if the cap can't be posted, it's deal breaker. I bought one high-end pen several years ago and was warned ahead of time that the cap doesn't post (fit on the tail end of the pen), and I thought, "How big of deal could that be?" Turns out, it was enough of a pain that I'm never buying one like it again. Probably wouldn't be as much of a concern if I had a desk job and the pen was primarily used at the desk, though.
pluvoyeah very covert ops, if you ever get caught by the enemy you can trick them into beleive you're a civlians because covert ops only use the matt black tactical pen. The interrogator will be disarmed and be happy to get close to you. When he comes close while forcing you to write your confession you can use the pen to stab him in the neck. Take his pistol and kill the two guards behind him.
10/10 highly recommended incognito tactial pen.
CalaverasgrandeThey only call it 'tactical' because Richard Wu likes that future-tactical-fascy aesthetic, and it's well built out of titanium with a carbide striker on the tip.
It's just a nice hefty pen, though I guess it does fit the 'tactical' umbrella if you get one of the non-anodized colors.
I am constantly bemused by the number of commenters curious to learn what makes this or that pen a "tactical pen"--as if everyone is misconstruing the same point! In this case, where the word tactical is used (as in tactic--implying a strategy), it is the tactic or strategy of the seller, not the pen that is referenced.
Here, the strategy of the seller (conspiring with MD) is to get you to fork over fifty-bucks for a $3 sliver of Ti and a $3 ballpoint refill. What you do with the pen after purchase (how it may save your life in an emergency, or whom you chose to assassinate with it, for instance) is of no concern to the manufacturer. They just want your dough--it's that simple!
RayFAlso, just to add - it's usually one "tactical" aspect for these kinds of pens...in this particular instance, it's a tip that could break glass in case of emergency.....cool. super tactical. But that's exactly why copy writers these days make so much money for their jobs...it's all about how you word the product that invokes an urgency or necessity upon the customer...like oh wow, so not only is this pen shiny, but it could maybe - in an alternate universe/my dreams while waiting for it to arrive - get me out of a sticky situation and I'd be interviewed on the news and forever a bad-ass who used a pen to fend off an attacker......(because you know how frequent of a situation it is when you've got a pen and no clue what to do with it; writing? pshh....lol)