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Throwing Cards

Original price $21.00 - Original price $22.00
Original price
$21.00
$21.00 - $22.00
Current price $21.00
Availability:
in stock, ready to be shipped
Availability:
in stock, ready to be shipped
Availability:
in stock, ready to be shipped
Type: 4 Aces - 4 Card Set

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The Royal Flush Metal Throwing Cards turn a playing card deck theme into a functional throwing weapon — five solid metal cards in a complete Royal Flush set, built for consistent flight and sharp target penetration. The slim flat profile promotes stable rotation on release, which is what separates a throwing card that sticks from one that tumbles and deflects.

Crafted from solid metal for durability and balance, these are built for repeated target practice rather than a single use. Nylon carrying case included for safe storage and transport. Available in three sets: Royal Flush Spades (5 cards, Ace through 10), Royal Flush Hearts (5 cards), or 4 Aces (4 cards, one per suit).

Metal Throwing Cards Features and Specs

  • Solid metal construction: Built for durability, balance, and consistent throwing performance across repeated use
  • Slim flat profile: Card shape promotes stable rotation and accurate release — the flat design reduces tumble during flight
  • Sharp edges: Designed for target penetration into foam or wood practice targets
  • Dimensions: 3.5" x 2"
  • Three set options: Royal Flush Spades (5 cards — Ace through 10 of Spades), Royal Flush Hearts (5 cards), or 4 Aces (4 cards, one per suit)
  • Nylon carrying case included: Snap closure for safe storage and transport between sessions

The Royal Flush theme isn't just aesthetic — the card shape is what makes these throw differently from a throwing knife or shuriken. The wider surface area catches air differently during flight, requiring a flatter release angle and faster wrist snap than a narrow blade. That difference in technique is part of what makes card throwing a distinct skill from other throwing disciplines. The nylon case keeps all five cards organized and the edges protected between practice sessions.

Steel Throwing Cards — What Makes Them Throw Well

Not all metal throwing cards are built equally — the key variables are weight distribution, edge geometry, and surface flatness. A card that's heavier at one end tumbles rather than rotating cleanly. A card with an inconsistent surface warps the airflow during flight and makes trajectory unpredictable. The Royal Flush cards use solid metal construction with a uniform flat profile specifically to produce consistent rotation — the same physics that make a well-balanced throwing knife fly true apply to a flat card in a horizontal plane. For throwers who also work with traditional throwing weapons, the throwing knife set provides a different technique challenge with the same target practice application.

Are metal throwing cards illegal?

Laws on throwing cards vary by state and municipality. In most US states, metal throwing cards occupy the same legal category as throwing stars or shuriken — some states prohibit them outright, others permit ownership but restrict carry in public, and many have no specific regulation covering them. States with known restrictions on throwing weapons include California, New York, and Indiana, among others. These are intended for target practice in private spaces — a backyard, a home range, or a training facility — not for public carry. Before purchasing, check your state's laws on throwing weapons or edged weapons, as these cards fall into that category in most jurisdictions where such laws exist.

How do you throw metal cards accurately?

Card throwing technique differs from knife throwing primarily in release angle and grip. Cards are typically held between the thumb and index finger at the short edge and released with a flat wrist snap rather than an overhand or sidearm throw — the goal is horizontal rotation rather than end-over-end tumbling. Distance matters: most beginners find 6–10 feet gives enough flight time to develop rotation before impact without so much distance that accuracy degrades. Foam targets are the recommended starting surface — they give clear feedback on whether the card is rotating correctly and sticking cleanly, and they're forgiving enough to use while developing release consistency. Wood targets are harder and better suited once basic technique is established.