This Titanium Multi-Tool Wrench Packs 15 EDC Functions Into One Pocket Tool

By James Harrison

This titanium multi-tool wrench packs an adjustable jaw, ratchet bits, caliper markings, and compact EDC utility into one pocket-sized tool.

Pocket tools are what happen when civilization admits that none of us can be trusted to leave the house with the correct screwdriver. One minute you are tightening a cabinet hinge, the next you are trying to open a box with a house key like a raccoon with a mortgage.

OmniPro Wrench 3.0 titanium multi-tool shown in a hand

The OmniPro Wrench 3.0 is a titanium multi-tool wrench system from Team IF that tries to solve that very specific little panic by putting a surprising amount of workshop energy into something roughly palm-sized. It is built around an actual adjustable wrench, not just a bottle opener wearing a hard hat, and then stacks on a ratchet-style bit setup, caliper markings, storage, a scalpel blade, a pen-like bit, and a small army of driver bits.

The main body is made from CNC-machined Grade 5 titanium, which is the kind of phrase that makes dads, EDC people, and anyone with a drawer labeled “important tiny metal things” sit up a little straighter. The tool measures about 104.5 x 46 mm and weighs around 174 grams, so it is more serious than a novelty keychain but still firmly in pocket, pouch, glovebox, or backpack territory.

OmniPro Wrench 3.0 with driver bits and accessories laid out on wood

The centerpiece is the adjustable wrench jaw, which opens from 0 to 18 mm. That means it can handle a lot of small nuts, bolts, bike adjustments, gear tweaks, and the kind of household fixes that begin with “this will take two seconds” and end with you sitting on the floor at 11:47 p.m. making direct eye contact with a loose washer.

Team IF also built in a revised ratcheting setup with multiple working angles, so the OmniPro is not limited to the extremely cursed motion of removing and reseating the whole tool after every tiny turn. It includes a bit holder, extension rod, and multiple bits, giving it more range than the average flat multitool that mostly exists to make your keys heavier and your jeans angrier.

Close view of the OmniPro Wrench 3.0 adjustable titanium wrench body

There is also a caliper-style measuring scale on the body for quick sizing, which is useful when you are trying to identify hardware without entering the hardware store and whispering “this one, but slightly less wrong” to an employee. The tool also has slots for tritium inserts, though the glowing inserts themselves are generally an optional/custom detail rather than the entire point of the system.

The OmniPro Wrench 3.0 comes in Sandblasted Titanium and Black PVD finishes, based on the campaign coverage. The sandblasted version has that clean machined-metal look that says “I repair things,” while the black PVD option says “I repair things, but with a slightly more tactical emotional support system.”

OmniPro Wrench 3.0 titanium multi-tool system with extension rod and bits

What It Packs Into The Tiny Tool Chest

The full system is pitched as having 15 functions, including the adjustable wrench, ratchet driver use, bit storage, extension rod compatibility, a scalpel blade, a pen-style bit, measuring marks, and utility slots. It is the sort of compact tool that makes sense for EDC setups, camping kits, bike bags, road-trip consoles, and that one kitchen drawer where your old Allen keys go to retire.

It is not trying to replace a real toolbox. Nobody should look at a palm-sized titanium wrench and decide they are now qualified to rebuild a suspension bridge. But for small fasteners, quick fixes, gear adjustments, and the little problems that ambush you far from the tool bench, this is much more capable than the usual novelty multitool slab.

OmniPro Wrench 3.0 with compact bit accessories and sleeve

Product images via Team IF / New Atlas.

Best For People Who Keep Saying, “I Might Need That”

This is a solid gift idea for the pocket-tool person, camper, tinkerer, cyclist, apartment fixer, gadget collector, or anyone who owns six flashlights but still uses their phone light to find a dropped screw. It also has the kind of neatly machined, slightly overbuilt design that makes it satisfying even before you have an actual problem to solve.

The OmniPro Wrench 3.0 is being offered through Kickstarter by Team IF, with campaign coverage reporting single-tool tiers around $159 to $169, a fuller package around $309 for early backers, and higher planned retail pricing depending on the package. Shipping has been listed for September 2026 if the campaign is successfully fulfilled, which means the usual crowdfunding caveat applies: cool tool, real campaign, but not the same thing as buying something already sitting in an Amazon warehouse.

Still, as far as pocketable titanium problem-solvers go, this one looks like it was designed for the exact person who hears a loose bolt rattle once and immediately enters main-character maintenance mode.

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@Kickstarter / Team IF
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