Photo time...
I got the first two this week in Vienna. Cheap, because the original sheaths were missing. One has antler grips, the other black hardwood, or maybe Micarta. I also got two little Arkansas stones and a wooden chopping-board.
These two are the typical German / central European "Nicker" style, which is the commonest type of fixed-blade hunting and outdoor knife. The name probably comes from "Genick" (German for "neck"), and is a reference to the fact that such knives are traditionally used to slit the throat of wounded game other than red deer or wild boar, for each of which there are special knives.
The third (which I bought at the Norsk folk museum in Oslo) and the Victorinox folder go on my belt when out in the woods, and the Mora 2000 comes along in my rucksack for heavy jobs or as a loaner.
I keep Dayglo orange versions of the Mora "clippers" in our cars for emergencies, along with a dayglo waistcoat/vest and a crank-powered flashlight.
I have a pile (maybe a dozen?) of the E. Jönsson Mora number 1's with the ugly red handles, which I use for skinning and butchering game at home - when one gets dull, I simply grab another from the pile and keep on working. They are cheap and cheerful, and I order a couple more every time I get something from the army-surplus shop. They take a wicked sharp edge.
Alpina Jagdmesser Nicker 3.25"
Widder Integral Jagdnicker 3.75"
Leif H. Jakobsen 3" (LHJ is a bladesmith in Gransherad in the Telemark, born in 1926)
Victorinox Hunter Knife 3"
Mora 2000 Knife 4.5"
Mora Clipper Knife 3"
E. Jönsson Mora Knife 4.5"