I went to the CCKS recently and saw the prototypes in person. They looked and felt amazing in my hand. I told the guy at the table (was it Sean, not sure) how much I enjoy Null knives and I really meant it. They are spectacular. He had that proud and happy look on his face that a parent gets when you compliment their kids.
I loved the look of the Raiden and Raikou but sold them because I just didn’t like the lock bar access. The Voodoo is something I kept, it’s perfect. How does the Raiden2 feel especially on the lock bar access?
@@ToRo909r I had plenty of room to drop in there comfortably, but if you’re looking for an extra generous bit of room in there, this isn’t the knife for you. There’s no additional relief in the showside scale to afford you that.
Their just another Vero or Reate or Bestech. Chinese production mass produced and machined piece with a decently hefty price tag. I rather spend 800 and get a Brown or Koenig than 400 on this.
@@HollywoodEDC ok? Firstly, they’re not $400, they’re far less. And no, you can’t compare a budget-oriented EDC knife to a machine custom like a Koenig. Nobody would. That’s not even fair. That’s like saying you’d rather buy a Ford Raptor over a Ford Ranger… yeah, no shit lol. And secondly, designed products are in every facet of our world. Not everyone who has the talent for design can also manufacture. From kitchen items to furniture to clothing… most things you own were designed by one person or team and produced by a manufacturer. It’s mind boggling that you think knives should be the one exception. Knifemaking is a talent and a skill. Not everyone has it or wants to develop it. There are a lot of really great knives out there designed by someone who cannot make a knife, and instead of overpricing them by using an American OEM that’ll guaranteed blow their timeline and deliver a significantly higher defect rate, they choose to go with a Chinese brand with a reputation for quality and timely delivery. Both of which benefit the customer more than the brand.
Update: the preorder DATE is correct but not the day. It’s TUESDAY November 19th, not Thursday.
Carry on.
I went to the CCKS recently and saw the prototypes in person. They looked and felt amazing in my hand. I told the guy at the table (was it Sean, not sure) how much I enjoy Null knives and I really meant it. They are spectacular. He had that proud and happy look on his face that a parent gets when you compliment their kids.
These ai bangers in your intros 🔥
My raikou has the glassiest action of any knife in my collection. Can't wait to get the Raiden
This particular model is the Aero variant, they're listed on the website.
Not for nuthin', but there is no Thursday, November 19th ... at least not in 2024.
It’s Tuesday. Sorry about that. The day was wrong but the date is correct.
Still have my original Raiden. Think I’ll be picking up the same spec at this one, and then toss some zirc accents on it.
I loved the look of the Raiden and Raikou but sold them because I just didn’t like the lock bar access. The Voodoo is something I kept, it’s perfect. How does the Raiden2 feel especially on the lock bar access?
@@ToRo909r I had plenty of room to drop in there comfortably, but if you’re looking for an extra generous bit of room in there, this isn’t the knife for you. There’s no additional relief in the showside scale to afford you that.
You wastage. This is the last time I watch your reviews! You want me to spend all my money, don't you? Just kidding, I love your reviews!
Their just another Vero or Reate or Bestech. Chinese production mass produced and machined piece with a decently hefty price tag. I rather spend 800 and get a Brown or Koenig than 400 on this.
@@HollywoodEDC ok? Firstly, they’re not $400, they’re far less. And no, you can’t compare a budget-oriented EDC knife to a machine custom like a Koenig. Nobody would. That’s not even fair. That’s like saying you’d rather buy a Ford Raptor over a Ford Ranger… yeah, no shit lol.
And secondly, designed products are in every facet of our world. Not everyone who has the talent for design can also manufacture. From kitchen items to furniture to clothing… most things you own were designed by one person or team and produced by a manufacturer. It’s mind boggling that you think knives should be the one exception. Knifemaking is a talent and a skill. Not everyone has it or wants to develop it. There are a lot of really great knives out there designed by someone who cannot make a knife, and instead of overpricing them by using an American OEM that’ll guaranteed blow their timeline and deliver a significantly higher defect rate, they choose to go with a Chinese brand with a reputation for quality and timely delivery. Both of which benefit the customer more than the brand.
@HollywoodEDC It's ok to be wrong, really it is.