SORD Fish Fillet & Boning Knife Set, Premium Gift-Boxed Review

5.0 Amazon rating$290.00

Our verdict

The SORD Fish Fillet & Boning Knife Set costs $290, over 14 times the $20.51 Kershaw 1259X, yet carries zero reviews and a bought-last-month count of 0-plus, so there is no buyer track record yet to justify that price against established fillet knives with hundreds or thousands of reviews.

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Best for

Buyers set on a premium gift-boxed fillet and boning set who are comfortable being an early adopter with no existing review history, and who see the packaging and price point as a gift-giving factor rather than a proven track record.

Skip if

Skip it if you want any review history before spending $290, since this listing shows zero reviews and zero bought last month, unlike every other fillet knife in this comparison that has real buyer data behind it.

  • Priced 800% above the category median ($32.23 across 74 tracked models)

Overview

Shopping for a gift-boxed fillet and boning knife set usually means paying up for presentation and branding rather than just a working blade. The SORD Fish Fillet & Boning Knife Set is positioned at that end of the market, priced at $290 and currently showing a perfect 5.0-star rating.

That rating comes from zero reviews, and the listing shows 0-plus units bought in the last month, so there is no track record behind either the price or the score. Every other fillet knife in this lineup has real buyer data to weigh: the Rapala 126SP has 423 reviews at 4.5 stars and 100-plus bought last month at $10.49, the Kershaw 1259X has 1,500 reviews at 4.6 stars and 50-plus bought last month at $20.51, and even the slower-moving Rapala BP136SH has 264 reviews at 4.4 stars. At $290, the SORD set costs more than 14 times the Kershaw and close to 28 times the Rapala 126SP, without a single review to confirm the blade quality, edge retention, or fit and finish match that price.

Until reviews accumulate, this is a gift-box purchase made on trust in the brand and packaging rather than on demonstrated demand. Anglers who want proven performance backed by hundreds or thousands of reviews are better served by the Rapala 126SP or the Kershaw 1259X.

Pros

  • Bundles fillet and boning knife styles in one gift-boxed set, per the product title
  • Presented as a premium gift box, so presentation is part of the purchase, not an afterthought
  • Holds the highest rating in this lineup at 5.0 stars, even if that number rests on a small sample
  • Listed InStock and ready to ship now
  • A single set purchase covers two knife types rather than buying a fillet knife and a boning knife separately

Cons

  • Zero reviews on record, the only knife in this comparison with no buyer feedback at all
  • Bought-last-month count of 0-plus, versus 100-plus for the Rapala 126SP and 50-plus for the Kershaw 1259X
  • Costs $290, more than 14 times the $20.51 Kershaw 1259X and about 28 times the $10.49 Rapala 126SP
  • No published specs for blade material, length, or handle construction to compare against the rest of this lineup
  • 5.0-star rating carries little weight without any reviews behind it

Performance notes

There is not much to interpret here beyond price and positioning, since this listing does not publish blade material, length, or handle specs the way the Rapala and Kershaw listings do. What is clear is the price tier: $290 puts the SORD set in a different category entirely from the working fillet knives in this comparison, all of which sit between $10.49 and $20.51. A gift-boxed set at that price is typically sold on presentation, on the pairing of a fillet knife with a boning knife in one box, and on brand positioning rather than on published steel grade or edge geometry. Without spec sheets to compare, anglers cannot verify whether the higher price reflects better steel, a longer warranty, or simply nicer packaging. That gap is worth noting before paying more than ten times what a well-reviewed fillet knife like the Rapala 126SP costs.

What buyers say

Zero reviews and a 0-plus bought-last-month figure make this the only knife in the lineup with no purchase pattern to read at all. A 5.0-star average sitting on top of no reviews is not evidence of quality, it simply means no one has left a rating yet, positive or negative. Compare that to the Rapala 126SP's 423 reviews at 4.5 stars or the Kershaw 1259X's 1,500 reviews at 4.6 stars, both of which show sustained demand at 100-plus and 50-plus bought last month respectively. Until the SORD set accumulates real review volume, there is no way to know if buyers who spend $290 come away satisfied or disappointed.

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Frequently asked questions

Why does the SORD Fish Fillet & Boning Knife Set cost $290 when other fillet knives cost under $25?

The listing does not publish blade material or handle specs, so the price appears tied to its premium gift-boxed positioning and the fact that it bundles fillet and boning knife styles in one set, rather than to any documented spec advantage over cheaper single knives like the Rapala 126SP.

Does this knife set have any reviews?

No. The listing shows 5.0 stars but across zero reviews, and 0-plus units bought last month, meaning there is no buyer feedback yet to confirm quality, edge retention, or overall satisfaction at this price point, unlike the hundreds of reviews behind the Rapala and Kershaw knives in this comparison.

Is it a good gift for an angler?

It is marketed as a premium gift-boxed set, which fits a gifting occasion, but buyers should know it carries no review history yet. Anglers who want a proven gift with a track record may prefer a well-reviewed option like the Kershaw 1259X instead.

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