Bayonet | Blue Steel is a Covert knife finish available from eight early CS:GO legacy cases. Live prices across Buff, Skinport, CSFloat, DMarket and other markets, plus 30-day price history and per-wear listings.
Relatively unchanged in its design since World War II, the bayonet still retains a place in modern military strategy. Bayonet charges have continued to be effective as recently as the second Gulf War and the war in Afghanistan. It has been cold blued.
"This is the malbec of weapon design - Booth, Arms Dealer" ★ COVERTFloat preview not available
512 listings across 7 markets.
Relatively unchanged in its design since World War II, the bayonet still retains a place in modern military strategy. Bayonet charges have continued to be effective as recently as the second Gulf War and the war in Afghanistan. It has been cold blued. <i>This is the malbec of weapon design - Booth, Arms Dealer</i>
One of the original Bayonet finishes, available from the eight early CS:GO legacy cases from August 2013 through February 2014.
Cold blued — this is the malbec of weapon design, Booth declares. The cold bluing process creates a blue-black protective oxide layer that traditional gunsmiths have applied for centuries.
Blue Steel is a collector-tier finish for players who prefer subdued material aesthetics over vivid paint; the cold-blued surface interacts with float differently from most finishes.
Covert knife — extraordinarily rare from cases. StatTrak versions are available.
Available from the eight early legacy cases. Full float range (0–1). WW and BS copies become increasingly blue-grey and worn as float increases.
Full float range (0–1). All wear conditions available. StatTrak available.
Cold bluing — traditional gunsmithing cold blue protective oxide process.
Appreciated for its understated material elegance; Blue Steel Bayonets read differently at each float tier, with lower-float copies showing cleaner bluing and higher-float copies developing more character. A staple in the secondary market for traditional-finish collectors.