There's no substitute for handling a knife before buying it. Check out local sporting good stores, knife and/or gun shows (gun shows usually have a lot of knives.) Something that looks fab on Amazon can feel badly in your hands.
I'll throw another idea out there, a Leatherman. They're all above $35 (and some above $135). If you want to wear it like a folding knife, the Skeletool is slimmer than other Leathermans and includes a pocket clip. Leatherman now makes the Skeletool in 440C and the CX in 154CM stainless, so you can pick between medium hard/easier to sharpen, or the harder 154CM stainless steel, also used by Benchmade.
Of course, Benchmade makes very good knives.
A suggestion, if you go with something harder than 440C, get some kind of diamond sharpening system. Not strictly necessary, just a lot faster.
(There is also the Skeletool KBX, which is really just a knife with a bottle opener. It doesn't float my boat, but maybe you'll like it.)
I'll throw another idea out there, a Leatherman. They're all above $35 (and some above $135). If you want to wear it like a folding knife, the Skeletool is slimmer than other Leathermans and includes a pocket clip. Leatherman now makes the Skeletool in 440C and the CX in 154CM stainless, so you can pick between medium hard/easier to sharpen, or the harder 154CM stainless steel, also used by Benchmade.
Of course, Benchmade makes very good knives.
A suggestion, if you go with something harder than 440C, get some kind of diamond sharpening system. Not strictly necessary, just a lot faster.
(There is also the Skeletool KBX, which is really just a knife with a bottle opener. It doesn't float my boat, but maybe you'll like it.)