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Tatara spotlights Muramasa Titanium 2026 June release on homepage

Tatara has moved the Muramasa Titanium 2026 June Release to its homepage, turning the adjustable into a premium value test. Titanium now has to justify itself on the shave and the ownership experience.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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Tatara spotlights Muramasa Titanium 2026 June release on homepage
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Tatara has put the Muramasa Titanium 2026 June Release at the top of its homepage, making the adjustable razor the brand’s most visible push right now. That matters because this is not a simple finish change on a stainless-steel favorite; Tatara is framing the titanium batch as a premium moment for a razor built around adjustability, engineering, and long-term ownership.

The Muramasa’s selling point is the patented sliding-plate system Tatara uses for its safety razors. By turning the dial, the user changes the contact point between blade and skin, which alters blade gap and exposure together. In practice, that gives one razor a wider range than a fixed-head DE: the shave can be set smoother or more aggressive without swapping parts or taking the razor apart mid-routine. For wet shavers who like to fine-tune a setup across beard growth, daily shaves, or different blades, that is the kind of mechanical flexibility that turns a razor into a tool rather than a trophy.

The titanium batch sits inside a broader brand story that already leans hard on durability and premium machining. Tatara says it launched its first razor, the Masamune, in 2017, and now sells three razor models made in Portugal in more than 60 countries. The company says those razors are finished by hand, come with a lifetime guarantee, and are made from stainless steel and titanium. It also says its blades last five to eight uses, with a blade cost of 20 to 40 cents, a clear signal that Tatara wants the conversation to stay on value over the long haul rather than on throwaway convenience.

That context makes the Muramasa Titanium less of a fresh category entry and more of a premium test case. If the standard Muramasa already gives a shaver one dialed-in razor for a range of situations, titanium has to earn its place by changing the experience in the hand, on the shelf, and in the ownership story. Tatara is betting that lightweight prestige and hand-finished metal can matter as much as the shave itself.

For the premium adjustable crowd, that is the real split. Stick with the standard Muramasa if the appeal is the mechanism and the tuning range. Step up to the titanium release if the draw is the same engineering wrapped in a more exclusive material story. Tatara’s homepage makes that choice impossible to miss.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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