Depends a lot on what your goal is, magnacut is great for butchering since it’s stainless and easy to sharpen which is good because it’ll need re-sharpened before your finish out an elk.
I go for harder “super” steels (zmax, 10v, maxamet, 15v, etc) that will stay sharp through field dressing a whole elk, but they are harder to sharpen so I’m able to do it at home on my
KME Sharpener (super fool-proof tool to do a near-pro job sharpening). A marble stone can touch them up in the field if they do get dull but I’ve had good luck getting through whole animals with these steels. As far as buying these steels look for some used Spyderco Mules in different steels and there’s great guys on instagram that build with these steels and are pretty affordable for what you’re getting (
Stonehocker Blades,
Deer Rock Knives).
I traded all my Havalons and Knives of Alaska classics for custom super steel knives from these guys and I’ve never looked back. Hooked for life.
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Here’s a graph of toughness vs edge retention I got from “Knife Steel Nerds” website. Very informative website if you have the time. You can see how magnacut is a beast of a stainless steel (blues) but still can’t compete with some of the tool steels (oranges). You’ll never get the best of both worlds so when it comes to meat cutting I lean toward edge retention.
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Edit: I’ll add that some folks like some guys above have a higher tolerance for cutting meat with a dull blade but it drives me nuts so this is what works for me. Also when it comes to edc I’d lean more toward the toughness side of the graph because these high edge retention steels can get chippy/brittle when breaking down pallets or batoning wood etc.