When a Grizzly is beveled at a true 25 degree angle, the bevel extends
past the center of the blade at the tip.
Please excuse the poor photo but it's all I have at the moment.
This head has been practiced with and has hit dirt a couple of times but you can see that it still has a fairly well defined point on the tanto. You may or may not be able to make out the tanto's back-bevel on the bottom blade but, it's there.
Here'a LH beveled STOS with the same tanto tip configuration as the grizzly, only this one has not been shot yet. I't's tough to see the back bevel on this one too but it's done the same as the Grizzly.
Tanto tips have significant advantages over both needle points and chisel points.
The first and best known advantage is that a tanto greatly increases the strength of the tip and prevents the tip from curling over on bone hits. A chisel tip also shares this advantage over a straight needle point.
The advantage that a sharpened tanto has over both needle points and chisel points is it's resistance to skip off of bone, particularly on angle shots. In order to take full advantage of the tanto it's important that the tip remains sharply pointed.
A lot of us used to single bevel the tanto from the same side as the main blade bevel but, Dr. Ashby's testing found that this configuation was the most likely to skip off bone on anything other than broadside shots.
To test the effective skip resistance of a sharpened tanto, lightly touch the tip to your thumbnail at a fairly low angle... it should dig in rather than skip across your nail, even when slowly rotated. If it digs into your nail, then it will dig into any bone just the same way.
Ron