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Product Description
In this digital world, writing with a pen and paper is awfully refreshing. TEC Accessories knows this too, which is why the company created the Ko-Axis Rail Pen: an elegant, ultra-comfortable pen that’s as enjoyable to write with as it is easy to refill and deploy.Thoughtfully designed with a low profile and wide body, the pen helps relieve tension and reduce stress on the fingers, creating a more natural writing experience.To deploy the pen tip, just slide the aluminum bronze grip along the rails Read More
I like it as I always enjoy seeing different takes/designs of everyday items. They don't always have to excel at functionality. If all we ever wanted was functionality we'd all write with Bic pens, use $20 flashlights and knives from IKEA. I have maybe 20 pens in my drawer. Very few of us *need* another pen so why not get one that pushes the envelope a bit.
End of the day taste and preferences are so subjective that no one can tell others what they should and shouldn't like/buy.
It looks like it should have a built in compass and protractor. Maybe keep going and have a built in sextant.
It's the pen you give people when you want to hear "...but all I wanted was a pen"
this pen is like a carefully crafted badge, designed solely to exemplify your total lack of taste. it's like they started with the idea of minimalism and just slowly added more and more tacky aesthetics to mill into the body, ending up looking like an AliExpress giveaway.
Just a minute here. Ignoring the waste of titanium, the bizarre aesthetic choices (6 parallel lines near the tip? Three drill holes on the back? The mix of cylinders, curved edges, flat edges...?) and the insane marketing "symmetrical profile for left and right hand use" (you mean like every other pen ever made?) this pen has an awful design, especially as it's marketed towards EDC:
An open rail sliding system means it's easy to get dirt, dust, or pocket lint stuck in the sliders, and is a point of failure
The ink refill system is outdated - better not bend or break the refill as you pull it out - and hope you don't mind ink on your fingers
No cap means more of a chance of getting dust/dirt inside the barrel, which would make it even harder to replace the ink
Depending on their strength, the neodymium magnets could pinch your fingers if you use the slider as a fidget device in your pocket
Neodymium magnets are brittle, and crack easily if you drop your pen. Those magnets are what's keeping the pen in a forward/back position, and are another point of failure.
This is the kind of pen you buy to show off that you’re a fancy tech executive who makes a bunch of money you can blow on fancy expensive stuff like this.
It’s like a Rolex: you don’t buy it because it’s useful, you buy it because it’s cool and you want to show it off.