
Looks Like a Pen. Hits Like a Wake-Up Call.
Standard ballpoint pen: 16 cm. Phantom: 15.5 cm.
The whole reason Phantom works is that nobody knows it's there. It doesn't bulge in your pocket. It doesn't print through fabric. It doesn't make your bag look "tactical." It sits in the pen sleeve of your backpack, in the cup holder of your car, in the inside pocket of your jacket — invisible until the second you need it. Then the bright electric arc and intimidating crackle do the rest.
Built to Stop a Threat Before It Starts
The loudest part of self-defense isn't the shock. It's the warning. The instant Phantom's arc fires, attackers hear a sharp electrical crackle and see a bright blue arc snap between the dual probes. In nearly every documented stun-device deployment, that visual and audio alone is enough to make a threat back off — no contact needed.
If contact is needed, the dual stainless-steel probes deliver a high-voltage, non-lethal shock that disrupts muscle control long enough for you to get to safety.
Two layers of deterrence:
- Layer 1 — Sound & sight: Bright arc, loud crackle. Most threats end here.
- Layer 2 — Contact: Non-lethal shock disables, doesn't injure permanently.
Customer Review
"I work the late shift at a hospital and the walk to my car at 11pm always made me nervous. I've had Phantom for three months. I haven't had to use it — but the night an aggressive guy started following me from the bus stop, I held it up, hit the button, and he turned around. Just the sound. Worth every dollar."
— Samuel P.
"Bought one for my college daughter and one for my wife. Both of them love how light it is and that it doesn't scream 'weapon.' My daughter says her roommates didn't even realize what it was until she showed them. That's the whole point."
— John A.
"I've owned a couple of stun guns over the years and they were all chunky plastic things I'd never actually carry. This one I actually carry. It clips on my pocket like a pen. Battery lasts forever. The arc is genuinely intimidating — I tested it (away from my face) and my dog ran out of the room."
— Daniel D.