https://youtu.be/8UgIgS89SwE?t=296here's a link for people who think you absolutely must have a full tang knife.
Eldris is a partial tang, 2mm thick, and you REALLY have to go out of your way to break it.
My main edc fixed blade is a partial tang knife (pic related), 0.075'' thick.
Treaking longswords and zweihanders were made with stick tangs. In WWI, Gurkhas used partial tang kukris with handles affixed by epoxy.
The Idea of an "indestructible", full tang knife came out of the 1980s survivalist trends.
The one thing that can be said in favor of the "full tang" knife, is that the essential part (ie blade+handle) is a single piece of steel, and even if the handle scales come off (extremely unlikely), you still have a fully functional knife. That said, many "full tang" knives, have holes in the tang to make it lighter. And it simplifies production, since it's easier to attach scales and then sand it down to a smooth finish, than to make a good fitting hidden tang (wether you use just epoxy, peened tang, or cross pin - like pic related).
Only if your blade is a partial tang that's epoxied into wood, there is the tiniest risk that you MIGHT do something that will cause the handle to come off, leaving you with a less functional knife.
Otherwise - a partial tang Mora will do just fine.