Kunai: What Ninja Really Used Them For (Not What Anime Shows)

In Naruto, kunai are thrown in volleys at high speed. In historical reality, the kunai was a digging and prying tool that shinobi adapted for tactical use. The gap between these two versions tells us something important about how ninja mythology was built.


What Is a Kunai?

A kunai (苦無) is a Japanese hand tool consisting of a flat iron or steel blade—typically leaf-shaped or spatula-shaped—attached to a handle, often with a ring at the base for attaching rope or cord. The total length varied but typically ranged from 20 to 50 centimeters.

The kunai was not originally a weapon. It was an agricultural and construction tool—used for digging, prying, scraping, making holes in walls, and general utility tasks. Its adoption into shinobi equipment reflects a core principle of ninjutsu as described in the Bansenshukai: carry tools that can be explained by a cover identity, and adapt what is available to operational needs.

A shinobi posing as a laborer or farmer carrying a kunai attracted no suspicion. The same tool could be used to breach a wall, wedge a door, scale a surface, or—when absolutely necessary—serve as a close-quarters weapon.


Historical Origins

The kunai’s origins as a utility tool predate its association with shinobi. Archaeological evidence places kunai-type tools in use in Japan from at least the Nara period (710–794), employed in agricultural and construction contexts.

The tool’s adoption into the shinobi toolkit likely occurred gradually across the Sengoku period, driven by the practical logic described above: multi-purpose tools that required no special explanation were operationally superior to purpose-built weapons that marked their carrier as a combatant.

The Bansenshukai (万川集海, 1676) discusses tools used in infiltration and climbing operations—the kunai-type implement appears in this context as a tool for creating footholds, breaching barriers, and general operational utility rather than as a primary weapon.


Actual Uses in Shinobi Operations

Based on primary sources and the tool’s physical design, kunai served several documented functions in shinobi operations:

Digging and breaching Creating holes in earthen walls, wooden floors, or plaster surfaces to allow entry or observation. The flat blade design is effective for this purpose in ways that a conventional knife is not.

Climbing assistance Wedged into gaps between stones or wooden beams, kunai could provide handholds or footholds for scaling walls. Used alongside shuko (hand claws) and ashiko (foot claws), they extended the shinobi’s ability to traverse architectural surfaces.

Prying and leverage Opening locked or barred doors, lifting floor panels, and manipulating physical barriers without the noise of more forceful methods.

Rope attachment The ring at the base of the handle allowed a rope to be attached, enabling the kunai to be used as a grappling hook for throwing over walls or ledges—one of the few uses that approaches the weapon’s fictional depiction, though the scale and precision involved is far more modest than popular culture suggests.

Close-quarters weapon of last resort The kunai could be used as a stabbing implement in close quarters when no other option was available. This was a contingency use, not the primary function—consistent with the broader shinobi principle that direct combat represented mission failure.


What Kunai Were Not

The popular image of kunai—thrown with precision at high velocity as a primary ranged weapon—is not supported by historical evidence.

The tool’s design is not optimized for throwing. The weight distribution, blade shape, and handle construction of a utility kunai are not conducive to accurate ranged throwing in the manner depicted in anime and games. Purpose-built throwing weapons (shuriken) existed precisely because they were designed for that specific function.

The Bansenshukai does not describe kunai as throwing weapons. The manual’s sections on ranged implements focus on shuriken and similar purpose-built tools rather than repurposed utility implements.

The fictional throwing kunai is a product of the same process that created the ninjato: visual and dramatic requirements in entertainment media drove the development of a weapon that looks good on screen, regardless of historical basis.

For comparison: Shuriken — What Throwing Stars Actually Were


Kunai in Pop Culture

The kunai’s fictional afterlife is dominated by Naruto, where it functions as the standard shinobi throwing weapon, often combined with paper bombs for explosive effect. The series’ world-building treats kunai as roughly equivalent to a soldier’s sidearm—ubiquitous, precision-thrown, and central to combat tactics.

This depiction bears essentially no relationship to the historical utility tool. It does, however, preserve one authentic element: the kunai as a compact, multi-purpose implement carried by shinobi as standard equipment. The historical reality of what it was used for is simply different from the fictional version.

Naruto‘s kunai has become so culturally embedded that many people encountering historical information about the tool for the first time find it counterintuitive. The utility tool does not match the weapon they have been shown. This gap is itself instructive about how thoroughly popular culture has replaced the historical record.

See how ninja weapons appear in anime: Naruto and Real Ninja History


Key Facts: Kunai at a Glance

Feature Details
Japanese writing 苦無
Original function Agricultural and construction utility tool
Design Flat leaf/spatula-shaped blade; ring handle
Typical length 20–50 cm
Primary shinobi uses Digging, breaching, climbing, prying
Weapon use Close quarters only; last resort
Throwing use Not historically documented as primary function
Pop-culture version Naruto’s precision throwing weapon

Next: Tekko-kagi — The Real Ninja Hand Claws Explained
Or explore the broader toolkit: Traditional Ninja Weapons — The Real Shinobi Arsenal


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