Video Overview
A perspective worth hearing from the Dalton Fischer Podcast: FBI SWAT operator Scott Payne on the single most important element of everyday carry that most people overlook. Scott brings a level of professional credibility to this conversation that’s rare in the EDC space — his carry choices and philosophy are shaped by years of high-stakes operational experience, not YouTube trends or gear reviews. This clip gets at a question that most EDC content avoids: is the gear the point, or is something else driving whether your carry actually serves you when it matters?
Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video
This video focuses on EDC philosophy and mindset rather than specific products. No gear is reviewed or linked in the video description. For the full conversation with Scott Payne, see the complete interview on the Dalton Fischer Podcast.
If you’re looking to build out a carry kit that aligns with a trained, professional approach to EDC, the following categories are worth researching:
- Quality folding knife (everyday utility + defensive capability) – Browse on Amazon
- Compact flashlight (situational awareness tool) – Browse on Amazon
- Individual first aid / tourniquet kit – Browse on Amazon
Editor’s Insight
Most EDC content is gear-first. The implicit assumption behind every flashlight comparison, every knife review, and every “what’s in my pocket” video is that better gear produces better outcomes. Scott Payne’s perspective challenges that assumption from a position most commentators don’t have: someone who has actually had to use their carry in life-threatening situations, and who has trained others to do the same.
The “most important part of EDC that people forget” framing is deliberately provocative because it implies the EDC community has gotten something wrong — not in what it carries, but in how it thinks about carrying. The gear community is exceptionally good at optimizing for weight, finish, steel composition, and deployment speed. It is considerably less focused on training, scenario planning, and the psychological dimension of actually using carry items under stress.
This gap between gear optimization and performance optimization is one of the more interesting tensions in the EDC world. A person who carries a $400 custom knife but has never trained to deploy it under stress, in low light, with an elevated heart rate, is objectively less prepared than someone carrying a $40 Kershaw with hundreds of hours of practical training. The gear community knows this abstractly but rarely discusses it, partly because gear is concrete and reviewable while training is experiential and hard to monetize.
FBI SWAT operators represent one end of the professional carry spectrum — a population that carries daily, trains relentlessly, and has their gear choices shaped by actual field outcomes rather than preferences or aesthetics. When someone from that background says the EDC community is forgetting something important, the honest response is to take the observation seriously rather than dismiss it as tactical posturing.
The training argument has been made before in the tactical and defensive carry communities, but it tends to stay siloed there — reaching the broader EDC audience that thinks of everyday carry primarily as utility and preparedness rather than defensive capability. Scott’s perspective, delivered in a conversational podcast format rather than a gun-culture context, potentially reaches an audience that the standard defensive carry channels don’t.
There’s also a mindset dimension worth examining. Carrying deliberately — knowing why each item is in your kit, what scenario it addresses, and how you’d actually use it — is meaningfully different from carrying because a specific item got a good review. The former produces a loadout shaped by your life and your likely scenarios. The latter produces a collection of well-reviewed items that may or may not serve your actual needs. The “most important part” that Payne references likely sits somewhere in that distinction.
For viewers who’ve built solid gear foundations and are looking for the next level of EDC development, this clip is worth the eight minutes — and the full interview even more so. The gear matters. But according to someone who has spent a career betting their life on both the gear and what they can do with it, gear is probably not the limiting factor for most everyday carriers. Credit to the Dalton Fischer Podcast for bringing this perspective to a broader audience.
Closing Remarks
Scott Payne’s take cuts to something the EDC community quietly knows but rarely addresses head-on: the gap between carrying gear and being prepared to use it. Whether you agree with his specific conclusion or not, the question he’s raising is worth sitting with. What does your training look like alongside your carry? Let us know in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no extra cost to you.







