Most stun guns are vulnerable to one failure mode: being grabbed. If a threat grabs your stun gun before or during deployment, you've lost your tool and potentially handed it to them. The Grab Guard side plates turn that attempt into an immediate deterrent — any hand that closes around the head of the device receives a shock.
The 130 dB alarm is an underused layer in most stun gun designs. At 130 dB, the alarm is disorienting at close range and audible at significant distance. In public spaces — parking lots, transit stations, apartment hallways — the alarm draws attention before force is required. Many encounters end here.
The LED provides the scene-setting layer: light for identification, for dark environments, for signaling. Used first, the LED lets you assess a situation before escalating to alarm or stun.
The three-layer sequence (LED → alarm → stun) maps to real escalation: presence, then deterrence, then force. Each tool is available independently, not locked behind the others.