Hatchet/tomahawk and a sturdy fixed blade knife. They serve their own unique roles but are also backups to each other. The axe can turn any wood resources into anything you need it to be very quickly and keep you in firewood all winter long, as well as give you a breaching tool. The knife stays on your person full time and is your survival tool in case you're ever separated from your pack. It is useful for any task requiring a point or a long edge, whittling, butchering, harvesting bark and thatching and bedding material, and gives you a fast and effective close quarters combat weapon.
You want two guns, two pistols of the same model family, 9mm so your ammunition is light and cheap and easy to find. One should be a compact model that stays on your hip, the other a long barreled model with a red dot sight and light/laser module that you can kill squirrels with at 15 yards and deer at 40 which stays in your pack but can be transferred to your person when you're feeling hungry. They must share the same magazine family. G19 and G34MOS is a good combo.
You need an assortment of small multipurpose tools including a file, a miniature hacksaw, a prybar with a nail puller, a section of metallic measuring tape that cannot stretch, a small C clamp, some neodymium magnets, copper wire, and 2 or 3 steel spikes.
You need a flashlight that is both rechargeable but can also use batteries if needed, and can illuminate a trail for several hours and reveal a potential threat from at least 100 yards. Stream light polytac x is a good example, nothing heavier is needed. You also need a wide angle hat light for working in the dark and for peripheral vision at night. These two lights together can make night maneuvers very easy and unstressful.
You need a few small kits, a medical kit, a sharpening kit, and a gun cleaning kit. These don't need to weigh very much at all. For medical all you really need is an elastic shoelace for a tourniquet, some raw honey, and bandages.