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RODMAN’s Shark Blade Ti Puts Damascus Steel and Grade 5 Titanium on a $29 Keychain

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Shark Blade Ti EDC Mini Knife

RODMAN-EDC’s new Shark Blade Ti is a keychain-sized folding knife built from Grade 5 titanium with a Damascus steel blade, and pledges start at $29 on Kickstarter. The campaign went live on July 8, 2026, and it cleared its funding goal early in the run.

Price: From $29
Where to Buy: Kickstarter



What makes it more than a novelty is the build: aerospace-grade titanium and a patterned Damascus blade are premium touches at a budget price, and the tritium slot is the kind of detail EDC fans rarely see this cheap. The trade-off is that it’s a live crowdfunding project, so backing it is a bet on production, and several specs stay unconfirmed for now. Here’s what the apex-predator theme actually buys you.

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The pitch: a shark-inspired blade sized for a keyring

Shark styling drives the design, and RODMAN-EDC pitches the Shark Blade Ti as keychain carry, sized closer to a keyring tool than a full pocket folder. The maker describes it as compact and lightweight, with a keyring-ready frame. It’s a mini knife first and a conversation piece second.

Shark Blade Ti EDC Mini Knife




A frame lock holds the blade open, so part of the titanium handle springs in behind the blade to keep it locked in use. That’s a common choice for small folders because it keeps the build simple and the part count low.

On a keyring, a blade lives a rougher life than one tucked in a pocket, riding against keys and picking up grit. A titanium frame earns its keep there, since it resists the corrosion that daily grime can start. The small size means quick access, though a blade this short asks for a careful grip once it’s open.

Grade 5 titanium body, Damascus steel blade

GR5 titanium makes up the frame, the aerospace-grade alloy known for a high strength-to-weight ratio and strong corrosion resistance. On a knife this small, that mostly translates to durability without extra bulk.

Damascus steel forms the blade, which gives it a wavy, marbled pattern. RODMAN-EDC is pitching that patterning as the visual centerpiece, tied directly to the shark theme.




Shark Blade Ti EDC Mini Knife

The blade’s tip is angled, listed by RODMAN-EDC at roughly 35 degrees, which points to a design tuned for slicing and fine detail work over hard prying. On a knife this compact, tip shape matters more than raw length, since it drives how the edge bites into everyday cuts.

What’s missing so far are the hard numbers: the public campaign details don’t confirm blade length, closed length, or weight.

The tritium slot is the surprise feature

The Shark Blade Ti includes a slot for a tritium vial, a self-powered light source that glows for years without a battery or a charge. That’s an unusual extra on a sub-$30 knife, since tritium usually shows up on pricier EDC gear. It also makes the knife easier to find in the dark on a crowded keyring.




Shark Blade Ti EDC Mini Knife

Tritium glows on its own through a slow, steady reaction, not by soaking up light the way the glow paint on cheaper gear does. It’s ready the moment you reach for it, even after hours in a dark bag. The glow fades gradually over more than a decade, and some regions limit tritium sales, which is part of why makers often ship the slot and leave the vial to the buyer.

RODMAN-EDC lists the tritium slot as a built-in feature, though the glowing vial itself may be a separate purchase depending on local rules.

Pricing and how long the campaign runs

Pledges start at $29 for the super early bird tier, which is the headline number RODMAN-EDC is leading with. The project set a modest $1,500 goal and passed it during its opening stretch.




The campaign runs 30 days, from July 8 to August 7, 2026. As with any crowdfunding project, a pledge backs production rather than buying a finished product, so timelines can shift.

Anyone weighing the $29 tier should read the campaign’s delivery notes closely, since small hardware projects often slip past their first estimates. A funded goal is a good sign, but production, quality checks, and shipping all still lie ahead. That risk isn’t unique to this knife, though it’s worth the reminder before any pledge.

Shark Blade Ti EDC Mini Knife

Two numbers are still open: the estimated delivery window and the regular price after the campaign aren’t confirmed yet.




Why it’s worth a look for EDC fans
Titanium and Damascus builds usually cost far more than $29, so the Shark Blade Ti is aiming squarely at the value end of the enthusiast market. The keyring format also fills a gap for anyone who wants a real blade without carrying a full-size pocket folder. The shark styling gives it a hook on a platform that rewards distinctive design.

For anyone who already carries a full-size folder, the Shark Blade Ti reads like a backup or a keyring companion more than a main blade. For a lighter setup, it could serve as the everyday cutter, as long as the final size suits bigger tasks. Either way, the pull is materials and looks, with real-world performance still to prove itself.

Price: From $29
Where to Buy: Kickstarter

The open questions are the ones that decide whether it’s a keeper: blade size, steel hardness, and how it carries every day. Until RODMAN-EDC confirms those, treat the specs above as the campaign’s claims rather than tested results.






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