Cole C.—November 1, 2025
These knives are fantastic. The steel is a bit soft, but it doesn't tend to chip and it is easy to sharpen, thats the tradeoff for super hard steel. You can put an amazing edge on this thing with ease. You cannot beat the steel quality for the price. Buy this knife. You will not regret it. Read more
Family Forum—December 27, 2025
This is one hell of a knife. How did the box it is frighteningly sharp. It easily glides through everything I've aimed at. I anticipate using this tool for the rest of my life. Extremely well made. Very affordable. Fantastic value for the price. I have several more expensive knives that aren't as well made as this one. Read more
Customer—September 28, 2025
I have heard from countless sources that this is a great knife, especially for the price. I agree. It is well built and sharp. Feels a lot like a steak knife out of the kitchen drawer, but not serrated and has that Scandy grind. I like it a lot. Definitely worth the price. Great first knife or great addition to a seasoned user's kit. If you are considering it, you should get it.. it is absolutely worth it. Read more
Shannon Porter—November 8, 2025
Bought this as a bushcraft type knife. I have used it on everything from wood to hosta cutting. Have opened boxes and bags. Beat on it with log and still sharp. This knife is the ultimate bushcraft knife and the best price around. Balance and thickness is perfect Read more
PA—September 23, 2025
This companion series knife is always a great value priced knife. I have a bad habit of losing my knives so these morakniv companions are perfect to take hunting as the cost is not high but the build and quality are excellent. The stainless steel version does hold it's edge well and it is easy enough to sharpen so I do not feel the need to buy the carbon steel version and worry about any rust. Perfect blade length and shape for a general hunting knife. Read more
Shopping Girl—November 26, 2025
Proud to own this knife! Great quality, durable, maintains its edge well. I will definitely buy more. The sheath is a great build, fits on a bikini while diving. Nice widdle knife for around the campfire. Use caution as it is sharp! Read more
Bruce P.—June 9, 2016
This is such an incredible value that you should push "buy it now", and only then finish reading this review. When I wrote this, Amazon had black for $13 and change, and it arrived in two days via Prime. This is the knife you should take camping and hiking. It will slice food, shave tinder for a fire, cut the wood for your emergency shelter and cut a lethal spear for hunting quite quickly, or a bow and arrow or fire drill with more work; hunt, slaughter humanely (with a cut that complies with Kosher or Halal), defend yourself with lethal force. It will hold an edge and you can sharpen it - although that won't be necessary very often. You won't have to oil it after every use like the carbon steel version, and you won't pull it out for your next trip only to find that it's rusted. This is 100% quality and value, and 0% presumption: Made in Sweden out of excellent stainless steel by an old company that's preserved its principles and defined this style of knife. It doesn't come with a fancy brand name and the designer's name at the start of the product name, like so many "designer" knives today. It's just a Mora-style knife made by Mora of Sweden, from Sandvik of Sweden's most well-rounded knife steel. It's made with modern manufacturing processes, isn't handmade and doesn't have the metalsmith's initials struck into it. So, are you willing to carry a second, heavy knife to pair with this one for batoning, prying apart a deer's hip joint, and breaking and entering if that's what it takes to survive? Lots of people pair the Mora with the Ka-Bar BK2, which is more expensive but still a bargain. But if you want to continue the theme of 100% quality and 0% presumption, consider the Sheffield of England-made Footprint Tools Hacking Knife. It's a 1/4 inch thick hunk of carbon steel with a wicked sharp edge, and the back of the blade deliberately left un-hardened and finished rough because it's meant to be struck with a hammer! Ugly as sin, astonishingly cheap with the leather sheath at $27 and change here on Amazon, and able to cut mild steel and lesser metals, brick, wood, PVC pipe, you name it. Want a third cutting instrument? The Laplander saw. Same principles and value, and will educate you about what you've been missing with lesser saws. Read more
Lorenz Weissel—December 17, 2025
The gold standard of cheap utilitarian knives. The grip is comfy, the blade is durable as hell, and it’s stainless, what else could you want. You should have one of these in every room of your house. Read more