Had the Endela been released in 1990 as the original Delica and Endura were, or even if it had debuted in the late 1990s or the early-to-mid 2000s, I have no doubt it would have become a modern classic like its older siblings. But in 2019, a good VG10 backlock—even one as good as the Endela—was likely to be eclipsed by either other Spydercos sporting more premium materials and/or newer lock designs; or by any number of the more affordable Chinese OEM-made linerlocks that were beginning to flood the market at the time. And in mid-2024 (the time of this writing), a VG10 backlock with a MAP of ~C$125 is even a tougher sell.
This is a bit of a shame, really, as I genuinely find the Endela to be a Goldilocks folder in the Seki City line: The Delica 4 is one of my all-time favourite folders—it's an eminently carryable pocket laser—but for work purposes, I find its handle a bit too stick-like to be very comfortable for prolonged, continuous use. And as much as I love the Endura 4—particularly the ergonomics of its longer and more broad handle relative to the Delica’s—I find the 3.75” blade length overkill for my use context, not to mention that it can appear very intimidating to "non-knife people" at my workplace. The Endela pairs a handle that is only slightly smaller than the Endura's with a 3.41” blade that is almost as slicey as the Delica's. It is the perfect design compromise, incorporating the best functional elements of both models while at the same time mitigating their most significant shortcomings. In fact, if I were to recommend a knife today to someone choosing between a Delica or an Endura, I would point them to an Endela instead, unless legal blade length restrictions are a concern or 1:1 compatibility with a trainer is desired (both the Delica 4 & the Endura 4 have blunt-bladed training variants, the Endela does not). I am not a big fan of the Sprint business model (FOMO and all that), but at least in the case of the CTS Micro-Melt PD#1 Endela, I am hoping that its limited edition nature and the novelty of its steel will get more members of the knife community to give the Endela a deserved second look. This Sprint will sell out, as all Sprints do (though in all likelihood not as quickly as the Delica and Endura PD#1 Sprints), but those who miss out can take heart from the notion that the regular production Endela in Böhler K390 arguably offers even better value—I bypassed the basic VG10 when I bought my first Endela and opted for the K390 version, as I think it offers the best cost/performance ratio among the model’s variants.
