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EVERYDAY CARRY BLOG

12 Must-Have Blackout Titanium EDC Essentials

By Bags, Fashion, Tools, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to HICONSUMPTION for this video covering 12 items with a focus on blades and cutting tools. HICONSUMPTION consistently delivers hands-on, practical coverage of everyday carry gear — the kind of channel that focuses on how things actually perform rather than spec-sheet talking points. Whether you’re building your first kit or refining a carry you’ve had for years, the gear in this video is worth knowing about.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The CIGA Design Planet II – Black Star Edition and the Ridge Wallet are the standout picks from this lineup. Both are solid choices with accessible Amazon pricing — click through the links above to check availability and current deals.

Editor’s Insight

HICONSUMPTION brings a curated, editorial perspective to EDC gear coverage — the same sensibility that defines their broader product writing, applied to everyday carry. The result is content that frames gear within lifestyle context rather than treating it as isolated kit.

This video covers 12 items with a focus on blades and cutting tools. That’s a useful scope — broad enough to surface options you might not have known about, focused enough that each item gets real coverage rather than a clip-and-move treatment. HICONSUMPTION’s format consistently prioritizes the “why carry this” question over the “what is this” answer, which is the right framing for people building practical kits.

Knives are the most discussed category in everyday carry, and for good reason — a well-chosen folding knife is one of the genuinely versatile tools in a daily kit, handling everything from package opening to food prep to emergency utility. The quality floor in production knives has risen significantly over the last decade; what used to cost $150 to get steel, grinds, and fit-and-finish worth carrying now costs $60-80 from the right makers. The gear in this video reflects that upgrade curve — you’re not sacrificing performance to stay under budget.

The CIGA Design Planet II – Black Star Edition is the kind of item that typifies this video’s selection philosophy — something specific enough to have a clear use case, well-made enough to represent the quality ceiling for its price tier, and carry-friendly enough to not require justification every morning. The EDC community has developed a reliable signal for gear at this level: it tends to stay in the kit. Items that don’t earn their carry weight get rotated out; the ones that survive are the ones that keep solving problems without creating new ones.

The Ridge Wallet represents a different but complementary carry need — the kind of coverage that makes multi-item videos useful even when you already have most categories covered. A well-assembled EDC kit isn’t static; it responds to changing contexts, seasons, and daily requirements. Adding one well-chosen item from this list might be exactly the adjustment your carry has been missing.

Pricing in the EDC space follows a recognizable curve: there’s a floor below which quality drops off sharply, a middle zone where you get genuine value, and an upper tier where you’re paying for brand, limited production, or materials that exceed daily carry requirements. Most of the items in this video sit in that middle zone — priced high enough to be well-made, low enough to be practical choices for actual daily use rather than collection pieces. For someone building a carry kit with a real budget, that’s the tier worth focusing on.

The target audience for a HICONSUMPTION video is someone who thinks about their carry with intentionality but isn’t a full-time gear reviewer. They have a sense of what they already use well and what gaps exist — maybe the bag situation is sorted but the light situation isn’t, or the knife is dialed in but the wallet is a ten-year-old billfold stuffed with receipts. Videos like this one work as a prioritization tool: here are several options worth knowing about, with enough context to understand which problems they solve and whether those problems match yours.

Everyday carry gear earns its keep over time. Unlike a gadget you buy for a specific project and shelve, carry items accumulate use history — the wear on a leather wallet, the scratches on a titanium pry bar, the fading on a knife’s pocket clip tell a story of actual use. The items in this video, like most of what HICONSUMPTION covers, are chosen for durability as much as function. Spending $60 on a well-made carry item you’ll use daily for five years costs less per use than spending $20 on something you’ll replace twice a year. That math compounds over a lifetime of carrying.

With 12 items covered, this video functions as a useful roundup — enough options to find something relevant regardless of where your current kit has gaps. HICONSUMPTION doesn’t pad these videos; if something made the cut, there’s a reason. Watch the full video for the hands-on context that text descriptions can’t fully capture: how something feels in hand, how it opens or deploys, whether the clip sits flush or prints through a pocket. Those details make the difference between a product that sounds good on paper and one you’ll actually reach for every morning.

Closing Remarks

Big thanks to HICONSUMPTION for the consistent, hands-on EDC coverage. If you found something worth adding to your kit, drop a comment below — what’s currently in your pockets, what problem you’re trying to solve, or which item from this video caught your eye. We read every comment. Subscribe to HICONSUMPTION on YouTube for regular gear coverage that’s grounded in real-world use.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

The Best Leatherman Multitool Deal Right Now (but not for long)

By Tools, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to Max LVL EDC for this video covering 1 item reviewing multi-tools and pocket utility gear. Max LVL EDC consistently delivers hands-on, practical coverage of everyday carry gear — the kind of channel that focuses on how things actually perform rather than spec-sheet talking points. Whether you’re building your first kit or refining a carry you’ve had for years, the gear in this video is worth knowing about.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The The Best Leatherman Multitool Deal Right Now (but not for long) is the clear headline item here — check the Amazon link above for current pricing and availability. Watch the full video for the hands-on breakdown.

Editor’s Insight

Max LVL EDC covers the spectrum from budget-accessible everyday tools to premium carry pieces, with a consistent focus on the practical value of gear rather than its aesthetic appeal alone. The channel has built a following among people who take their carry seriously without taking themselves too seriously.

Roundup videos are the most practically useful format in EDC content — they compress the research process by covering multiple options against the same criteria in a single sitting. This one from Max LVL EDC covers 1 options, which is enough depth to give you real comparison context without exhausting you with diminishing returns on the analysis.

Multi-tools remain one of the most genuinely useful carry items you can add to a kit, especially for anyone who works with their hands or spends time in environments where improvised solutions matter. The gap between cheap multi-tools and good ones is more pronounced than in most EDC categories — blade steel, plier precision, and hinge quality all degrade sharply below the $40 tier. The options covered here represent the carry-worthy segment of the market.

The The Best Leatherman Multitool Deal Right Now (but not for long) is the kind of item that typifies this video’s selection philosophy — something specific enough to have a clear use case, well-made enough to represent the quality ceiling for its price tier, and carry-friendly enough to not require justification every morning. The EDC community has developed a reliable signal for gear at this level: it tends to stay in the kit. Items that don’t earn their carry weight get rotated out; the ones that survive are the ones that keep solving problems without creating new ones.

Pricing in the EDC space follows a recognizable curve: there’s a floor below which quality drops off sharply, a middle zone where you get genuine value, and an upper tier where you’re paying for brand, limited production, or materials that exceed daily carry requirements. Most of the items in this video sit in that middle zone — priced high enough to be well-made, low enough to be practical choices for actual daily use rather than collection pieces. For someone building a carry kit with a real budget, that’s the tier worth focusing on.

The target audience for a Max LVL EDC video is someone who thinks about their carry with intentionality but isn’t a full-time gear reviewer. They have a sense of what they already use well and what gaps exist — maybe the bag situation is sorted but the light situation isn’t, or the knife is dialed in but the wallet is a ten-year-old billfold stuffed with receipts. Videos like this one work as a prioritization tool: here are 1 options worth knowing about, with enough context to understand which problems they solve and whether those problems match yours.

Everyday carry gear earns its keep over time. Unlike a gadget you buy for a specific project and shelve, carry items accumulate use history — the wear on a leather wallet, the scratches on a titanium pry bar, the fading on a knife’s pocket clip tell a story of actual use. The items in this video, like most of what Max LVL EDC covers, are chosen for durability as much as function. Spending $60 on a well-made carry item you’ll use daily for five years costs less per use than spending $20 on something you’ll replace twice a year. That math compounds over a lifetime of carrying.

Single-product or small-collection videos like this one from Max LVL EDC go deeper than roundups — there’s time to cover edge cases, failure modes, and comparison context that gets cut from a ten-item list. If any of the items here are on your radar, the full video is worth watching before committing. Max LVL EDC is consistent about covering both what works and what doesn’t, which is a more useful standard than channels that treat every product as worthy of a strong recommendation.

Closing Remarks

Big thanks to Max LVL EDC for the consistent, hands-on EDC coverage. If you found something worth adding to your kit, drop a comment below — what’s currently in your pockets, what problem you’re trying to solve, or which item from this video caught your eye. We read every comment. Subscribe to Max LVL EDC on YouTube for regular gear coverage that’s grounded in real-world use.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

The BEST Tool on ANY Multitool?

By Fashion, Tools, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to Best Damn EDC for this video covering 20 items with a focus on blades and cutting tools. Best Damn EDC consistently delivers hands-on, practical coverage of everyday carry gear — the kind of channel that focuses on how things actually perform rather than spec-sheet talking points. Whether you’re building your first kit or refining a carry you’ve had for years, the gear in this video is worth knowing about.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The edc #everydaycarry #gear #worksharp #bigidesign and the Knife Knews are the standout picks from this lineup. Both are solid choices with accessible Amazon pricing — click through the links above to check availability and current deals.

Editor’s Insight

Best Damn EDC has earned its reputation as one of the most consistently practical EDC channels on YouTube. The format is straightforward — real gear, real use, honest assessments — which makes it a reliable starting point for anyone trying to make informed carry decisions.

Roundup videos are the most practically useful format in EDC content — they compress the research process by covering multiple options against the same criteria in a single sitting. This one from Best Damn EDC covers 20 options, which is enough depth to give you real comparison context without exhausting you with diminishing returns on the analysis.

Knives are the most discussed category in everyday carry, and for good reason — a well-chosen folding knife is one of the genuinely versatile tools in a daily kit, handling everything from package opening to food prep to emergency utility. The quality floor in production knives has risen significantly over the last decade; what used to cost $150 to get steel, grinds, and fit-and-finish worth carrying now costs $60-80 from the right makers. The gear in this video reflects that upgrade curve — you’re not sacrificing performance to stay under budget.

The edc #everydaycarry #gear #worksharp #bigidesign is the kind of item that typifies this video’s selection philosophy — something specific enough to have a clear use case, well-made enough to represent the quality ceiling for its price tier, and carry-friendly enough to not require justification every morning. The EDC community has developed a reliable signal for gear at this level: it tends to stay in the kit. Items that don’t earn their carry weight get rotated out; the ones that survive are the ones that keep solving problems without creating new ones.

The Knife Knews represents a different but complementary carry need — the kind of coverage that makes multi-item videos useful even when you already have most categories covered. A well-assembled EDC kit isn’t static; it responds to changing contexts, seasons, and daily requirements. Adding one well-chosen item from this list might be exactly the adjustment your carry has been missing.

Pricing in the EDC space follows a recognizable curve: there’s a floor below which quality drops off sharply, a middle zone where you get genuine value, and an upper tier where you’re paying for brand, limited production, or materials that exceed daily carry requirements. Most of the items in this video sit in that middle zone — priced high enough to be well-made, low enough to be practical choices for actual daily use rather than collection pieces. For someone building a carry kit with a real budget, that’s the tier worth focusing on.

The target audience for a Best Damn EDC video is someone who thinks about their carry with intentionality but isn’t a full-time gear reviewer. They have a sense of what they already use well and what gaps exist — maybe the bag situation is sorted but the light situation isn’t, or the knife is dialed in but the wallet is a ten-year-old billfold stuffed with receipts. Videos like this one work as a prioritization tool: here are several options worth knowing about, with enough context to understand which problems they solve and whether those problems match yours.

Everyday carry gear earns its keep over time. Unlike a gadget you buy for a specific project and shelve, carry items accumulate use history — the wear on a leather wallet, the scratches on a titanium pry bar, the fading on a knife’s pocket clip tell a story of actual use. The items in this video, like most of what Best Damn EDC covers, are chosen for durability as much as function. Spending $60 on a well-made carry item you’ll use daily for five years costs less per use than spending $20 on something you’ll replace twice a year. That math compounds over a lifetime of carrying.

With 20 items covered, this video functions as a useful roundup — enough options to find something relevant regardless of where your current kit has gaps. Best Damn EDC doesn’t pad these videos; if something made the cut, there’s a reason. Watch the full video for the hands-on context that text descriptions can’t fully capture: how something feels in hand, how it opens or deploys, whether the clip sits flush or prints through a pocket. Those details make the difference between a product that sounds good on paper and one you’ll actually reach for every morning.

Closing Remarks

Big thanks to Best Damn EDC for the consistent, hands-on EDC coverage. If you found something worth adding to your kit, drop a comment below — what’s currently in your pockets, what problem you’re trying to solve, or which item from this video caught your eye. We read every comment. Subscribe to Best Damn EDC on YouTube for regular gear coverage that’s grounded in real-world use.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

This Tool Might Be Better Than a Knife

By Fashion, Gadgets, Tech, Tools, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to Best Damn EDC for this video covering 17 items with a focus on blades and cutting tools. Best Damn EDC consistently delivers hands-on, practical coverage of everyday carry gear — the kind of channel that focuses on how things actually perform rather than spec-sheet talking points. Whether you’re building your first kit or refining a carry you’ve had for years, the gear in this video is worth knowing about.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The edc #everydaycarry #gear #worksharp #bigidesign and the Show and Tell are the standout picks from this lineup. Both are solid choices with accessible Amazon pricing — click through the links above to check availability and current deals.

Editor’s Insight

Best Damn EDC has earned its reputation as one of the most consistently practical EDC channels on YouTube. The format is straightforward — real gear, real use, honest assessments — which makes it a reliable starting point for anyone trying to make informed carry decisions.

This video covers 17 items with a focus on blades and cutting tools. That’s a useful scope — broad enough to surface options you might not have known about, focused enough that each item gets real coverage rather than a clip-and-move treatment. Best Damn EDC’s format consistently prioritizes the “why carry this” question over the “what is this” answer, which is the right framing for people building practical kits.

Knives are the most discussed category in everyday carry, and for good reason — a well-chosen folding knife is one of the genuinely versatile tools in a daily kit, handling everything from package opening to food prep to emergency utility. The quality floor in production knives has risen significantly over the last decade; what used to cost $150 to get steel, grinds, and fit-and-finish worth carrying now costs $60-80 from the right makers. The gear in this video reflects that upgrade curve — you’re not sacrificing performance to stay under budget.

The edc #everydaycarry #gear #worksharp #bigidesign is the kind of item that typifies this video’s selection philosophy — something specific enough to have a clear use case, well-made enough to represent the quality ceiling for its price tier, and carry-friendly enough to not require justification every morning. The EDC community has developed a reliable signal for gear at this level: it tends to stay in the kit. Items that don’t earn their carry weight get rotated out; the ones that survive are the ones that keep solving problems without creating new ones.

The Show and Tell represents a different but complementary carry need — the kind of coverage that makes multi-item videos useful even when you already have most categories covered. A well-assembled EDC kit isn’t static; it responds to changing contexts, seasons, and daily requirements. Adding one well-chosen item from this list might be exactly the adjustment your carry has been missing.

Pricing in the EDC space follows a recognizable curve: there’s a floor below which quality drops off sharply, a middle zone where you get genuine value, and an upper tier where you’re paying for brand, limited production, or materials that exceed daily carry requirements. Most of the items in this video sit in that middle zone — priced high enough to be well-made, low enough to be practical choices for actual daily use rather than collection pieces. For someone building a carry kit with a real budget, that’s the tier worth focusing on.

The target audience for a Best Damn EDC video is someone who thinks about their carry with intentionality but isn’t a full-time gear reviewer. They have a sense of what they already use well and what gaps exist — maybe the bag situation is sorted but the light situation isn’t, or the knife is dialed in but the wallet is a ten-year-old billfold stuffed with receipts. Videos like this one work as a prioritization tool: here are several options worth knowing about, with enough context to understand which problems they solve and whether those problems match yours.

Everyday carry gear earns its keep over time. Unlike a gadget you buy for a specific project and shelve, carry items accumulate use history — the wear on a leather wallet, the scratches on a titanium pry bar, the fading on a knife’s pocket clip tell a story of actual use. The items in this video, like most of what Best Damn EDC covers, are chosen for durability as much as function. Spending $60 on a well-made carry item you’ll use daily for five years costs less per use than spending $20 on something you’ll replace twice a year. That math compounds over a lifetime of carrying.

With 17 items covered, this video functions as a useful roundup — enough options to find something relevant regardless of where your current kit has gaps. Best Damn EDC doesn’t pad these videos; if something made the cut, there’s a reason. Watch the full video for the hands-on context that text descriptions can’t fully capture: how something feels in hand, how it opens or deploys, whether the clip sits flush or prints through a pocket. Those details make the difference between a product that sounds good on paper and one you’ll actually reach for every morning.

Closing Remarks

Big thanks to Best Damn EDC for the consistent, hands-on EDC coverage. If you found something worth adding to your kit, drop a comment below — what’s currently in your pockets, what problem you’re trying to solve, or which item from this video caught your eye. We read every comment. Subscribe to Best Damn EDC on YouTube for regular gear coverage that’s grounded in real-world use.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

Leatherman Finally Built the Wave We’ve Been Asking For

By Tools, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to Best Damn EDC for this video covering 1 item reviewing multi-tools and pocket utility gear. Best Damn EDC consistently delivers hands-on, practical coverage of everyday carry gear — the kind of channel that focuses on how things actually perform rather than spec-sheet talking points. Whether you’re building your first kit or refining a carry you’ve had for years, the gear in this video is worth knowing about.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Join this channel to get access to perks is the clear headline item here — check the Amazon link above for current pricing and availability. Watch the full video for the hands-on breakdown.

Editor’s Insight

Best Damn EDC has earned its reputation as one of the most consistently practical EDC channels on YouTube. The format is straightforward — real gear, real use, honest assessments — which makes it a reliable starting point for anyone trying to make informed carry decisions.

Single-product deep dives like this one from Best Damn EDC offer something roundups can’t: time to get into the details that matter — deployment, feel in hand, long-term durability signals, edge cases and failure modes. If any of the gear here is on your radar, this kind of focused coverage is worth more than a thirty-second mention in a ten-item list.

Multi-tools remain one of the most genuinely useful carry items you can add to a kit, especially for anyone who works with their hands or spends time in environments where improvised solutions matter. The gap between cheap multi-tools and good ones is more pronounced than in most EDC categories — blade steel, plier precision, and hinge quality all degrade sharply below the $40 tier. The options covered here represent the carry-worthy segment of the market.

The Join this channel to get access to perks is the kind of item that typifies this video’s selection philosophy — something specific enough to have a clear use case, well-made enough to represent the quality ceiling for its price tier, and carry-friendly enough to not require justification every morning. The EDC community has developed a reliable signal for gear at this level: it tends to stay in the kit. Items that don’t earn their carry weight get rotated out; the ones that survive are the ones that keep solving problems without creating new ones.

Pricing in the EDC space follows a recognizable curve: there’s a floor below which quality drops off sharply, a middle zone where you get genuine value, and an upper tier where you’re paying for brand, limited production, or materials that exceed daily carry requirements. Most of the items in this video sit in that middle zone — priced high enough to be well-made, low enough to be practical choices for actual daily use rather than collection pieces. For someone building a carry kit with a real budget, that’s the tier worth focusing on.

The target audience for a Best Damn EDC video is someone who thinks about their carry with intentionality but isn’t a full-time gear reviewer. They have a sense of what they already use well and what gaps exist — maybe the bag situation is sorted but the light situation isn’t, or the knife is dialed in but the wallet is a ten-year-old billfold stuffed with receipts. Videos like this one work as a prioritization tool: here are 1 options worth knowing about, with enough context to understand which problems they solve and whether those problems match yours.

Everyday carry gear earns its keep over time. Unlike a gadget you buy for a specific project and shelve, carry items accumulate use history — the wear on a leather wallet, the scratches on a titanium pry bar, the fading on a knife’s pocket clip tell a story of actual use. The items in this video, like most of what Best Damn EDC covers, are chosen for durability as much as function. Spending $60 on a well-made carry item you’ll use daily for five years costs less per use than spending $20 on something you’ll replace twice a year. That math compounds over a lifetime of carrying.

Single-product or small-collection videos like this one from Best Damn EDC go deeper than roundups — there’s time to cover edge cases, failure modes, and comparison context that gets cut from a ten-item list. If any of the items here are on your radar, the full video is worth watching before committing. Best Damn EDC is consistent about covering both what works and what doesn’t, which is a more useful standard than channels that treat every product as worthy of a strong recommendation.

Closing Remarks

Big thanks to Best Damn EDC for the consistent, hands-on EDC coverage. If you found something worth adding to your kit, drop a comment below — what’s currently in your pockets, what problem you’re trying to solve, or which item from this video caught your eye. We read every comment. Subscribe to Best Damn EDC on YouTube for regular gear coverage that’s grounded in real-world use.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

Why You Should Carry an OTF Every Day

By Fashion, Tools, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to Best Damn EDC for this video covering 12 items with a focus on blades and cutting tools. Best Damn EDC consistently delivers hands-on, practical coverage of everyday carry gear — the kind of channel that focuses on how things actually perform rather than spec-sheet talking points. Whether you’re building your first kit or refining a carry you’ve had for years, the gear in this video is worth knowing about.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The edc #everydaycarry #gear #worksharp #bigidesign and the True One-Handed Knife are the standout picks from this lineup. Both are solid choices with accessible Amazon pricing — click through the links above to check availability and current deals.

Editor’s Insight

Best Damn EDC has earned its reputation as one of the most consistently practical EDC channels on YouTube. The format is straightforward — real gear, real use, honest assessments — which makes it a reliable starting point for anyone trying to make informed carry decisions.

This video covers 12 items with a focus on blades and cutting tools. That’s a useful scope — broad enough to surface options you might not have known about, focused enough that each item gets real coverage rather than a clip-and-move treatment. Best Damn EDC’s format consistently prioritizes the “why carry this” question over the “what is this” answer, which is the right framing for people building practical kits.

Knives are the most discussed category in everyday carry, and for good reason — a well-chosen folding knife is one of the genuinely versatile tools in a daily kit, handling everything from package opening to food prep to emergency utility. The quality floor in production knives has risen significantly over the last decade; what used to cost $150 to get steel, grinds, and fit-and-finish worth carrying now costs $60-80 from the right makers. The gear in this video reflects that upgrade curve — you’re not sacrificing performance to stay under budget.

The edc #everydaycarry #gear #worksharp #bigidesign is the kind of item that typifies this video’s selection philosophy — something specific enough to have a clear use case, well-made enough to represent the quality ceiling for its price tier, and carry-friendly enough to not require justification every morning. The EDC community has developed a reliable signal for gear at this level: it tends to stay in the kit. Items that don’t earn their carry weight get rotated out; the ones that survive are the ones that keep solving problems without creating new ones.

The True One-Handed Knife represents a different but complementary carry need — the kind of coverage that makes multi-item videos useful even when you already have most categories covered. A well-assembled EDC kit isn’t static; it responds to changing contexts, seasons, and daily requirements. Adding one well-chosen item from this list might be exactly the adjustment your carry has been missing.

Pricing in the EDC space follows a recognizable curve: there’s a floor below which quality drops off sharply, a middle zone where you get genuine value, and an upper tier where you’re paying for brand, limited production, or materials that exceed daily carry requirements. Most of the items in this video sit in that middle zone — priced high enough to be well-made, low enough to be practical choices for actual daily use rather than collection pieces. For someone building a carry kit with a real budget, that’s the tier worth focusing on.

The target audience for a Best Damn EDC video is someone who thinks about their carry with intentionality but isn’t a full-time gear reviewer. They have a sense of what they already use well and what gaps exist — maybe the bag situation is sorted but the light situation isn’t, or the knife is dialed in but the wallet is a ten-year-old billfold stuffed with receipts. Videos like this one work as a prioritization tool: here are several options worth knowing about, with enough context to understand which problems they solve and whether those problems match yours.

Everyday carry gear earns its keep over time. Unlike a gadget you buy for a specific project and shelve, carry items accumulate use history — the wear on a leather wallet, the scratches on a titanium pry bar, the fading on a knife’s pocket clip tell a story of actual use. The items in this video, like most of what Best Damn EDC covers, are chosen for durability as much as function. Spending $60 on a well-made carry item you’ll use daily for five years costs less per use than spending $20 on something you’ll replace twice a year. That math compounds over a lifetime of carrying.

With 12 items covered, this video functions as a useful roundup — enough options to find something relevant regardless of where your current kit has gaps. Best Damn EDC doesn’t pad these videos; if something made the cut, there’s a reason. Watch the full video for the hands-on context that text descriptions can’t fully capture: how something feels in hand, how it opens or deploys, whether the clip sits flush or prints through a pocket. Those details make the difference between a product that sounds good on paper and one you’ll actually reach for every morning.

Closing Remarks

Big thanks to Best Damn EDC for the consistent, hands-on EDC coverage. If you found something worth adding to your kit, drop a comment below — what’s currently in your pockets, what problem you’re trying to solve, or which item from this video caught your eye. We read every comment. Subscribe to Best Damn EDC on YouTube for regular gear coverage that’s grounded in real-world use.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

9 Must-Have American Made EDC Essentials

By Bags, Fashion, Gadgets, Tactical, Tools, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to HICONSUMPTION for this video covering 9 items with a focus on blades and cutting tools. HICONSUMPTION consistently delivers hands-on, practical coverage of everyday carry gear — the kind of channel that focuses on how things actually perform rather than spec-sheet talking points. Whether you’re building your first kit or refining a carry you’ve had for years, the gear in this video is worth knowing about.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Leatherman Rustle Fixed Blade and the CW&T Pen Type-B are the standout picks from this lineup. Both are solid choices with accessible Amazon pricing — click through the links above to check availability and current deals.

Editor’s Insight

HICONSUMPTION brings a curated, editorial perspective to EDC gear coverage — the same sensibility that defines their broader product writing, applied to everyday carry. The result is content that frames gear within lifestyle context rather than treating it as isolated kit.

This video covers 9 items with a focus on blades and cutting tools. That’s a useful scope — broad enough to surface options you might not have known about, focused enough that each item gets real coverage rather than a clip-and-move treatment. HICONSUMPTION’s format consistently prioritizes the “why carry this” question over the “what is this” answer, which is the right framing for people building practical kits.

Knives are the most discussed category in everyday carry, and for good reason — a well-chosen folding knife is one of the genuinely versatile tools in a daily kit, handling everything from package opening to food prep to emergency utility. The quality floor in production knives has risen significantly over the last decade; what used to cost $150 to get steel, grinds, and fit-and-finish worth carrying now costs $60-80 from the right makers. The gear in this video reflects that upgrade curve — you’re not sacrificing performance to stay under budget.

The Leatherman Rustle Fixed Blade is the kind of item that typifies this video’s selection philosophy — something specific enough to have a clear use case, well-made enough to represent the quality ceiling for its price tier, and carry-friendly enough to not require justification every morning. The EDC community has developed a reliable signal for gear at this level: it tends to stay in the kit. Items that don’t earn their carry weight get rotated out; the ones that survive are the ones that keep solving problems without creating new ones.

The CW&T Pen Type-B represents a different but complementary carry need — the kind of coverage that makes multi-item videos useful even when you already have most categories covered. A well-assembled EDC kit isn’t static; it responds to changing contexts, seasons, and daily requirements. Adding one well-chosen item from this list might be exactly the adjustment your carry has been missing.

Pricing in the EDC space follows a recognizable curve: there’s a floor below which quality drops off sharply, a middle zone where you get genuine value, and an upper tier where you’re paying for brand, limited production, or materials that exceed daily carry requirements. Most of the items in this video sit in that middle zone — priced high enough to be well-made, low enough to be practical choices for actual daily use rather than collection pieces. For someone building a carry kit with a real budget, that’s the tier worth focusing on.

The target audience for a HICONSUMPTION video is someone who thinks about their carry with intentionality but isn’t a full-time gear reviewer. They have a sense of what they already use well and what gaps exist — maybe the bag situation is sorted but the light situation isn’t, or the knife is dialed in but the wallet is a ten-year-old billfold stuffed with receipts. Videos like this one work as a prioritization tool: here are several options worth knowing about, with enough context to understand which problems they solve and whether those problems match yours.

Everyday carry gear earns its keep over time. Unlike a gadget you buy for a specific project and shelve, carry items accumulate use history — the wear on a leather wallet, the scratches on a titanium pry bar, the fading on a knife’s pocket clip tell a story of actual use. The items in this video, like most of what HICONSUMPTION covers, are chosen for durability as much as function. Spending $60 on a well-made carry item you’ll use daily for five years costs less per use than spending $20 on something you’ll replace twice a year. That math compounds over a lifetime of carrying.

With 9 items covered, this video functions as a useful roundup — enough options to find something relevant regardless of where your current kit has gaps. HICONSUMPTION doesn’t pad these videos; if something made the cut, there’s a reason. Watch the full video for the hands-on context that text descriptions can’t fully capture: how something feels in hand, how it opens or deploys, whether the clip sits flush or prints through a pocket. Those details make the difference between a product that sounds good on paper and one you’ll actually reach for every morning.

Closing Remarks

Big thanks to HICONSUMPTION for the consistent, hands-on EDC coverage. If you found something worth adding to your kit, drop a comment below — what’s currently in your pockets, what problem you’re trying to solve, or which item from this video caught your eye. We read every comment. Subscribe to HICONSUMPTION on YouTube for regular gear coverage that’s grounded in real-world use.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

Prime Day 2025 (EDC Gear list)

By Gadgets, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to Max LVL EDC for this video covering 1 item spanning multiple EDC categories. Max LVL EDC consistently delivers hands-on, practical coverage of everyday carry gear — the kind of channel that focuses on how things actually perform rather than spec-sheet talking points. Whether you’re building your first kit or refining a carry you’ve had for years, the gear in this video is worth knowing about.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Prime Day 2025 (EDC Gear list) is the clear headline item here — check the Amazon link above for current pricing and availability. Watch the full video for the hands-on breakdown.

Editor’s Insight

Max LVL EDC covers the spectrum from budget-accessible everyday tools to premium carry pieces, with a consistent focus on the practical value of gear rather than its aesthetic appeal alone. The channel has built a following among people who take their carry seriously without taking themselves too seriously.

Single-product deep dives like this one from Max LVL EDC offer something roundups can’t: time to get into the details that matter — deployment, feel in hand, long-term durability signals, edge cases and failure modes. If any of the gear here is on your radar, this kind of focused coverage is worth more than a thirty-second mention in a ten-item list.

The gear in this video spans the kind of daily utility that EDC is actually about: items that solve real problems, built well enough to outlast cheap alternatives, priced accessibly enough to be practical choices rather than aspirational ones. Max LVL EDC’s selection here reflects a consistent editorial judgment — gear earns its place in the video the same way it earns its place in a carry kit: by being genuinely useful.

The Prime Day 2025 (EDC Gear list) is the kind of item that typifies this video’s selection philosophy — something specific enough to have a clear use case, well-made enough to represent the quality ceiling for its price tier, and carry-friendly enough to not require justification every morning. The EDC community has developed a reliable signal for gear at this level: it tends to stay in the kit. Items that don’t earn their carry weight get rotated out; the ones that survive are the ones that keep solving problems without creating new ones.

Pricing in the EDC space follows a recognizable curve: there’s a floor below which quality drops off sharply, a middle zone where you get genuine value, and an upper tier where you’re paying for brand, limited production, or materials that exceed daily carry requirements. Most of the items in this video sit in that middle zone — priced high enough to be well-made, low enough to be practical choices for actual daily use rather than collection pieces. For someone building a carry kit with a real budget, that’s the tier worth focusing on.

The target audience for a Max LVL EDC video is someone who thinks about their carry with intentionality but isn’t a full-time gear reviewer. They have a sense of what they already use well and what gaps exist — maybe the bag situation is sorted but the light situation isn’t, or the knife is dialed in but the wallet is a ten-year-old billfold stuffed with receipts. Videos like this one work as a prioritization tool: here are 1 options worth knowing about, with enough context to understand which problems they solve and whether those problems match yours.

Everyday carry gear earns its keep over time. Unlike a gadget you buy for a specific project and shelve, carry items accumulate use history — the wear on a leather wallet, the scratches on a titanium pry bar, the fading on a knife’s pocket clip tell a story of actual use. The items in this video, like most of what Max LVL EDC covers, are chosen for durability as much as function. Spending $60 on a well-made carry item you’ll use daily for five years costs less per use than spending $20 on something you’ll replace twice a year. That math compounds over a lifetime of carrying.

Single-product or small-collection videos like this one from Max LVL EDC go deeper than roundups — there’s time to cover edge cases, failure modes, and comparison context that gets cut from a ten-item list. If any of the items here are on your radar, the full video is worth watching before committing. Max LVL EDC is consistent about covering both what works and what doesn’t, which is a more useful standard than channels that treat every product as worthy of a strong recommendation.

Closing Remarks

Big thanks to Max LVL EDC for the consistent, hands-on EDC coverage. If you found something worth adding to your kit, drop a comment below — what’s currently in your pockets, what problem you’re trying to solve, or which item from this video caught your eye. We read every comment. Subscribe to Max LVL EDC on YouTube for regular gear coverage that’s grounded in real-world use.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

The Ultimate Military Inspired GMT? -Tudor Pelagos FXD GMT Review

By Bags, Tech, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to HICONSUMPTION for this video covering 6 items covering phone protection and tech accessories. HICONSUMPTION consistently delivers hands-on, practical coverage of everyday carry gear — the kind of channel that focuses on how things actually perform rather than spec-sheet talking points. Whether you’re building your first kit or refining a carry you’ve had for years, the gear in this video is worth knowing about.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The First Impressions and the The Case are the standout picks from this lineup. Both are solid choices with accessible Amazon pricing — click through the links above to check availability and current deals.

Editor’s Insight

HICONSUMPTION brings a curated, editorial perspective to EDC gear coverage — the same sensibility that defines their broader product writing, applied to everyday carry. The result is content that frames gear within lifestyle context rather than treating it as isolated kit.

This video covers 6 items covering phone protection and tech accessories. That’s a useful scope — broad enough to surface options you might not have known about, focused enough that each item gets real coverage rather than a clip-and-move treatment. HICONSUMPTION’s format consistently prioritizes the “why carry this” question over the “what is this” answer, which is the right framing for people building practical kits.

The gear in this video spans the kind of daily utility that EDC is actually about: items that solve real problems, built well enough to outlast cheap alternatives, priced accessibly enough to be practical choices rather than aspirational ones. HICONSUMPTION’s selection here reflects a consistent editorial judgment — gear earns its place in the video the same way it earns its place in a carry kit: by being genuinely useful.

The First Impressions is the kind of item that typifies this video’s selection philosophy — something specific enough to have a clear use case, well-made enough to represent the quality ceiling for its price tier, and carry-friendly enough to not require justification every morning. The EDC community has developed a reliable signal for gear at this level: it tends to stay in the kit. Items that don’t earn their carry weight get rotated out; the ones that survive are the ones that keep solving problems without creating new ones.

The The Case represents a different but complementary carry need — the kind of coverage that makes multi-item videos useful even when you already have most categories covered. A well-assembled EDC kit isn’t static; it responds to changing contexts, seasons, and daily requirements. Adding one well-chosen item from this list might be exactly the adjustment your carry has been missing.

Pricing in the EDC space follows a recognizable curve: there’s a floor below which quality drops off sharply, a middle zone where you get genuine value, and an upper tier where you’re paying for brand, limited production, or materials that exceed daily carry requirements. Most of the items in this video sit in that middle zone — priced high enough to be well-made, low enough to be practical choices for actual daily use rather than collection pieces. For someone building a carry kit with a real budget, that’s the tier worth focusing on.

The target audience for a HICONSUMPTION video is someone who thinks about their carry with intentionality but isn’t a full-time gear reviewer. They have a sense of what they already use well and what gaps exist — maybe the bag situation is sorted but the light situation isn’t, or the knife is dialed in but the wallet is a ten-year-old billfold stuffed with receipts. Videos like this one work as a prioritization tool: here are several options worth knowing about, with enough context to understand which problems they solve and whether those problems match yours.

Everyday carry gear earns its keep over time. Unlike a gadget you buy for a specific project and shelve, carry items accumulate use history — the wear on a leather wallet, the scratches on a titanium pry bar, the fading on a knife’s pocket clip tell a story of actual use. The items in this video, like most of what HICONSUMPTION covers, are chosen for durability as much as function. Spending $60 on a well-made carry item you’ll use daily for five years costs less per use than spending $20 on something you’ll replace twice a year. That math compounds over a lifetime of carrying.

With 6 items covered, this video functions as a useful roundup — enough options to find something relevant regardless of where your current kit has gaps. HICONSUMPTION doesn’t pad these videos; if something made the cut, there’s a reason. Watch the full video for the hands-on context that text descriptions can’t fully capture: how something feels in hand, how it opens or deploys, whether the clip sits flush or prints through a pocket. Those details make the difference between a product that sounds good on paper and one you’ll actually reach for every morning.

Closing Remarks

Big thanks to HICONSUMPTION for the consistent, hands-on EDC coverage. If you found something worth adding to your kit, drop a comment below — what’s currently in your pockets, what problem you’re trying to solve, or which item from this video caught your eye. We read every comment. Subscribe to HICONSUMPTION on YouTube for regular gear coverage that’s grounded in real-world use.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

More knives from Kizer! Lots of cool options

By Tools, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to Max LVL EDC for this video covering 1 item spanning multiple EDC categories. Max LVL EDC consistently delivers hands-on, practical coverage of everyday carry gear — the kind of channel that focuses on how things actually perform rather than spec-sheet talking points. Whether you’re building your first kit or refining a carry you’ve had for years, the gear in this video is worth knowing about.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The More knives from Kizer! Lots of cool options is the clear headline item here — check the Amazon link above for current pricing and availability. Watch the full video for the hands-on breakdown.

Editor’s Insight

Max LVL EDC covers the spectrum from budget-accessible everyday tools to premium carry pieces, with a consistent focus on the practical value of gear rather than its aesthetic appeal alone. The channel has built a following among people who take their carry seriously without taking themselves too seriously.

Single-product deep dives like this one from Max LVL EDC offer something roundups can’t: time to get into the details that matter — deployment, feel in hand, long-term durability signals, edge cases and failure modes. If any of the gear here is on your radar, this kind of focused coverage is worth more than a thirty-second mention in a ten-item list.

The gear in this video spans the kind of daily utility that EDC is actually about: items that solve real problems, built well enough to outlast cheap alternatives, priced accessibly enough to be practical choices rather than aspirational ones. Max LVL EDC’s selection here reflects a consistent editorial judgment — gear earns its place in the video the same way it earns its place in a carry kit: by being genuinely useful.

The More knives from Kizer! Lots of cool options is the kind of item that typifies this video’s selection philosophy — something specific enough to have a clear use case, well-made enough to represent the quality ceiling for its price tier, and carry-friendly enough to not require justification every morning. The EDC community has developed a reliable signal for gear at this level: it tends to stay in the kit. Items that don’t earn their carry weight get rotated out; the ones that survive are the ones that keep solving problems without creating new ones.

Pricing in the EDC space follows a recognizable curve: there’s a floor below which quality drops off sharply, a middle zone where you get genuine value, and an upper tier where you’re paying for brand, limited production, or materials that exceed daily carry requirements. Most of the items in this video sit in that middle zone — priced high enough to be well-made, low enough to be practical choices for actual daily use rather than collection pieces. For someone building a carry kit with a real budget, that’s the tier worth focusing on.

The target audience for a Max LVL EDC video is someone who thinks about their carry with intentionality but isn’t a full-time gear reviewer. They have a sense of what they already use well and what gaps exist — maybe the bag situation is sorted but the light situation isn’t, or the knife is dialed in but the wallet is a ten-year-old billfold stuffed with receipts. Videos like this one work as a prioritization tool: here are 1 options worth knowing about, with enough context to understand which problems they solve and whether those problems match yours.

Everyday carry gear earns its keep over time. Unlike a gadget you buy for a specific project and shelve, carry items accumulate use history — the wear on a leather wallet, the scratches on a titanium pry bar, the fading on a knife’s pocket clip tell a story of actual use. The items in this video, like most of what Max LVL EDC covers, are chosen for durability as much as function. Spending $60 on a well-made carry item you’ll use daily for five years costs less per use than spending $20 on something you’ll replace twice a year. That math compounds over a lifetime of carrying.

Single-product or small-collection videos like this one from Max LVL EDC go deeper than roundups — there’s time to cover edge cases, failure modes, and comparison context that gets cut from a ten-item list. If any of the items here are on your radar, the full video is worth watching before committing. Max LVL EDC is consistent about covering both what works and what doesn’t, which is a more useful standard than channels that treat every product as worthy of a strong recommendation.

Closing Remarks

Big thanks to Max LVL EDC for the consistent, hands-on EDC coverage. If you found something worth adding to your kit, drop a comment below — what’s currently in your pockets, what problem you’re trying to solve, or which item from this video caught your eye. We read every comment. Subscribe to Max LVL EDC on YouTube for regular gear coverage that’s grounded in real-world use.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

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