I agree with the posts about testing it by doing the things you know you need it to do 90+% of the time. Cut rope, chop/shape sticks, peel things, gut things, or whatever. Do some controlled reality-based field testing. That will be the only way to find out. It is better to risk catastrophic failure in the backyard and end up buying another unproven knife than suffering the same in the field without the chance to replace it. Realize that risks abound. Just because it made it through your testing does not mean it won't fail in the field doing the exact same thing.
My $.02
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"Its not a matter of being ready as it is being prepared" -- B. E. J. Taylor