Every toolbox has one drawer that looks like a metal salad made by someone who got interrupted during a home repair in 2019. There are loose bits, mystery Allen keys, a tiny wrench from furniture you no longer own, and at least one blade you are not emotionally prepared to identify.

The OmniPro Wrench 3.0 is what happens when that entire drawer gets sent to finishing school and comes back as a pocket-sized slab of Grade 5 titanium. It is a compact multitool built around an actual adjustable wrench, with a ratchet, caliper, pen, scalpel holder, bit storage, pry functions, and enough tiny mechanical confidence to make your junk drawer feel deeply unemployed.
Made by Team IF and launched through Kickstarter, the third-generation OmniPro is designed as an EDC tool for people who want something flatter and more wrench-forward than the usual pliers-based multitool. Instead of folding handles and a plier head, this thing looks like a machined titanium cartridge that happens to be hiding a tiny repair shop inside.

The headline feature is the adjustable wrench jaw, which is rated for nuts and bolts from 0 to 18 mm. That gives it a real reason to exist beyond looking like something a cyberpunk maintenance worker would keep clipped to a belt. The wrench can be used at multiple working angles, and the updated ratcheting system is meant to make the tool more useful in tight spaces where your hand has the turning radius of a refrigerator.
Inside the body are storage channels for 4-mm bits, along with a magnetic system for keeping those bits from immediately joining the floor ecosystem. It also works with an extension rod, which is one of those small practical details that separates “cool desk object” from “I may actually use this before swearing at a cabinet hinge.”

Team IF lists 15 functions in all, including the adjustable wrench, ratchet driver, screwdriver, scalpel blade holder, ruler, caliper, pry tool, bottle opener, phone stand, bit storage, and several small everyday utility roles. The overall body measures about 104.5 x 46 mm and weighs roughly 174 g, so it is compact enough for a pouch, bag, or vehicle kit, though probably not the thing you forget is in your gym shorts pocket unless your shorts are built like cargo pants with a retirement plan.
A pocket wrench for small fixes and large overconfidence
The best use case here is not rebuilding an engine on the shoulder of a highway while dramatic music plays. It is the everyday nonsense zone: tightening a chair bolt, adjusting a bike accessory, opening packaging, fixing a camping gadget, measuring a small part, or being the only person in the room who can produce a scalpel blade holder from a metal rectangle like an oddly prepared magician.

The titanium construction also matters. Grade 5 titanium keeps the body strong, corrosion-resistant, and lighter than it would be if the whole thing were made from tool steel. It is still a solid chunk of pocket gear, but the material choice makes sense for an EDC tool that might live in a backpack, glove box, camping kit, or that special drawer where you keep things too nice to actually misplace.
There are also tritium slots on the body, which means users can add tiny glow vials if they want the tool to be easier to spot in the dark. That is absolutely practical, and also a little bit like giving your wrench nightclub underglow. Both things can be true.

One limitation is baked into the whole concept: this is still a compact multitool. It is for small and medium everyday jobs, not replacing a full socket set, proper shop wrench, dedicated measuring tools, or the big screwdriver you use when a tiny one would technically work but emotionally would not.
What it is built for
- Everyday carry kits that need a real adjustable wrench
- Camping, bike, car, and travel repair pouches
- People who like multitools but rarely need pliers first
- Small hardware jobs where a flat titanium tool is easier to carry than a full pouch
- Gift buyers shopping for the person who already owns five knives and somehow still wants another useful metal rectangle

Images courtesy of Yanko Design and Team IF.
The OmniPro Wrench 3.0 is currently listed through Kickstarter, with single-tool backing tiers reported around to , a full package early-backer tier around , and planned retail pricing reported around for the full package. As with any crowdfunded product, delivery timing and final availability depend on the campaign, but Team IF has positioned this version with a September 2026 shipping target.
It is a strange little object in the most productive way: part wrench, part bit driver, part pocket ruler, part emergency “hold on, I have exactly the weird tool for this” moment. Somewhere, a junk drawer just felt a disturbance in the force.

