>>119079Knives that can do that are less suited for the majority of camping tasks such as opening your food, cutting any paracord, whittling and all the like. You should want a knife that is easy to handle and can do detail work but is just big enough to trim sticks, scrape up some tender and do the harder things. A 4" up to a 5" max drop or spear point fixed blade is ideal. That's why Kephart settled on his design over 100 years ago and it's still popular and why there's a sort of standard "bushcraft" knife with separate origins that is remarkably similar and which Less Stroud, Ray Mears and a myriad of others have settled in on. Man has been in the woods and making fire for a very long time and the ideal knife is more or less settled in on, look at the similarities of:
>mora>kephart knife>bushcraft knifeSo to answer your question, yes there is such a knife. "pic related" and there's others too but they're not going to work well for a utility purpose and are no more "do-it-all" than a machete. Plus it'll alienate you from a lot of the puddy brains you meet on the trails.