Bravo 1. It is designed as a survival / bushcraft knife and works better as such.
Razel is a great tool, but none of it's features applies to camping / survival.
Here is "A Sample of Special Uses of the Razel" from their website.
*Reaming a hole: it only takes a turn of the wrist, using lower double-edged point of the Razel.
*Reaching in and push-cutting when you can't get the knife in to use the primary edge.
*Scraping gaskets, paint, stickers on windows, epoxy on benches, or anything on a flat surface.
*One-handed cutting: pushing front edge straight into material, not a slicing cut.
*Chiseling and prying: cabinet makers tap the pommel with a mallet when chiseling wood.