Kansept Goblin by Marshall Noble: Small Knife, Big Ambitions

I used to believe compact EDC knives were compromise tools—shrunken blades for people afraid of their local laws. The Kansept Goblin destroyed that prejudice. Marshall Noble's 2002-era design philosophy, filtered through aviation inspiration from the XF-85 Goblin fighter jet, created a 5.63" package that outperforms folders twice its size. After two months of daily carry, I'm convinced this is the most capable sub-2.5" blade on the market.

Three Titanium Variants, One Fighter Jet Soul

I tested all three Goblin configurations to identify handle preference differences. The Kansept Goblin K2016A4 features chamfered titanium with compass print—aviation heritage literally etched into the handle, providing both aesthetic narrative and grip texture. For pure ergonomics, the Kansept Goblin K2016A5 swaps prints for precision grooves that lock into finger placement during heavy cutting. My summer choice? The Kansept Goblin K2016A6—those ventilation holes reduce weight further and prevent pocket sweat accumulation during humid months. All three share identical 2.4oz weight and CPM-S35VN steel blades.

CPM-S35VN in a Sub-$150 Package

Here's where I challenge the boutique knife establishment. Noble specified genuine CPM-S35VN blade steel—the same powder metallurgy compound found in $400+ custom knives—for a production folder under $150. During my testing, the 2.18" Wharncliffe maintained a working edge through three weeks of cardboard, rope, and food prep without stropping. The flat grind behind that straight edge slices cleaner than hollow-ground drop points I've owned. At 0.118" stock thickness, the blade provides surprising spine rigidity for such a compact tool.

Triple Deployment: Options Matter

Noble understands that compact knife ergonomics vary by hand size and scenario. The front flipper tab deploys fastest for my medium gloves; the finger flick hole accommodates larger hands; the traditional thumb hole works with winter gloves. Ceramic ball bearings make all three methods equally smooth—no wrist flick required. The frame lock mechanism engages with titanium-on-steel confidence, no blade play after 500+ openings. At 2.4oz with full titanium construction, the Goblin carries lighter than plastic-handled competitors with inferior steel.

Wharncliffe Geometry: Maximum Edge, Minimum Length

Marshall's selection of Wharncliffe blade style for a sub-2.2" knife is deliberate genius. That straight edge utilizes 100% of the legal cutting length—no belly curve wasting precious millimeters. The broad blade width (disproportionate to length) provides actual cutting surface comparable to 2.5" drop points. I processed an entire Amazon shipment, broke down boxes, and opened letters in one session without feeling under-bladed.

Verdict: Aviation Heritage, Modern Performance

Whether you choose the narrative-rich K2016A4, ergonomic-focused K2016A5, or ventilated K2016A6, you're acquiring Marshall Noble custom design heritage from a 20-year veteran. For enthusiasts seeking premium compact EDC knives with S35VN steel, titanium frames, and triple deployment versatility, the Goblin series embarrasses price-comparable competitors. I've stopped carrying my 3.5" folder—this 2.18" blade handles 95% of tasks with superior steel and half the pocket weight. Sometimes the best tool is the one you'll actually carry every single day.

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