Karambit Marble Fade
(Minimal Wear)About Karambit Marble Fade
The ★ Karambit Marble Fade applies a marbled finish to the karambit’s curved blade, blending metallic black and silver beneath a candy-coated mix of red, blue, and yellow tones. Among Karambit knife skins in CS2, Marble Fade is defined by its fluid color transitions across the blade, while the dark textured handle and colored finger ring keep the focus on the finish.
Release & Source
The Karambit Marble Fade can be found in the Chroma Case, Chroma 2 Case, and Chroma 3 Case. The Karambit Marble Fade is part of the Marble Fade family.
Float Range & Wear
The Karambit Marble Fade cannot drop in Field-Tested, Well-Worn, Battle-Scarred. The minimum float is 0, making Factory New the best available condition. The maximum float is 0.15, with Minimal Wear being the worst available condition.
The Karambit Marble Fade is a Covert-tier skin with an estimated drop chance of ~0.64%, making it one of the rarest Karambit skins in CS2.
Popularity
Community Rating
Frequently Asked Questions
Specialist Gloves Marble Fade are the most direct match because they repeat the same red, blue, and yellow palette as the blade. Sport Gloves Pandora's Box work well if your knife leans blue or purple, while Specialist Gloves Crimson Kimono pair cleanly with Fire and Ice patterns that show more red and white. For a lighter combo, Moto Gloves POW! also fit the bright multicolor finish.
Weapon finishes with clean white, red, blue, or gold accents tend to match it best. Good pairings include the AK-47 Bloodsport, M4A1-S Printstream, USP-S Kill Confirmed, and Desert Eagle Blaze. If you want a cooler palette, the AWP Neo-Noir and Glock-18 Vogue also work with the knife’s blue and pink tones.
Karambit Marble Fade patterns are usually discussed by color distribution rather than numbered pattern tiers. The best-known category is Fire and Ice, which has a mostly red-and-blue blade with little or no yellow, while more common patterns mix red, blue, and yellow in different proportions. On a Karambit, buyers also pay attention to how those colors sit along the play side and around the tip and curve of the blade.
Fire and Ice is a Marble Fade pattern where the blade shows mostly red and blue, creating a clean two-tone look with minimal yellow. On the Karambit, stronger Fire and Ice examples are valued for having those colors visible across the main blade face rather than broken up by large yellow sections. Collectors often sort them into unofficial tiers based on how little yellow appears and how balanced the red-blue split looks.
A Karambit Marble Fade Fire and Ice usually sells above standard Marble Fade patterns because the red-blue distribution is rarer and more closely watched by traders. The exact premium depends on the unofficial Fire and Ice tier, how visible the pattern is on the play side, and whether it is StatTrak. For a current number, compare recent sales for the same tier and inspect-side presentation rather than using the base Marble Fade price alone.

