It must be hard to make a "tactical" wallet. Just about every manufacturer of tactical gear has tried and just about all of them have failed. So, what's wrong with this particular wallet? It's just not very ... um ... tactical.<br /><br />The number one reason I purchase anything described as "tactical" is perceived durability. Here, the RapDom wallet is successful. This wallet feels indestructible. It's just fine as a general purpose wallet. Its got a large currency compartment with a divider, a zippered pocket, and several transparent ID windows. It also has a huge velcro closure which arguably, is the least tactical aspect of the wallet. There is no disguising the tearing sound of a velcro closure.<br /><br />However, that last bit is just nit-picking because the biggest "tactical" failure of this wallet is that it makes no allowance for the large-ish odd sized documents a proper tactical man will need to carry. That's it in a nutshell. If you need to have things on your person like military documents, or CDL documents (my mew medial examiners certificate is quite large), this wallet simply fails. The ID window is way too small to shove additional DOT docs into, as is the zippered pocket inside the main body of the wallet.<br /><br />Lastly, the memory card storage strikes me as being unnecessary, but I suppose one could argue that digitall backups of important documents could be stored in this wallet... until you inevitably destroy the memory cards after months of sitting on the wallet, causing the cards to bend.
Rating: [3 of 5 Stars!]