'jerk the blade?' How about accidentally touch it to open skin. Bumping it deliberately edge side on will open fabric and skin easily. Deliberate 'slamming' will hew limbs. More than 50% of casualties on medieval battlefields are missing a leg, 10% of those both legs from a single blow.Housebroken Lunatic said:Which doesn't make it superior in any way, since such techniques are redundant if you are trained to use a katana.SakSak said:Allowing for vastly different techniques that would be all but impossible with the katana.
Just because a sword allows for other techniques than another sword it doesn't mean that they give you a practical edge in combat.
It's kind of like saying that a Barret .50 rifle would be superior if it had a medium range grenade launcher attached to it, just because you can fire grenades with the rifle as well as .50 rounds. In practical terms however this would be redundant since the rifle is intended to be used at ranges where a medium range grenade launcher fill no useful purpose what so ever.
Yeah, but where it can cut in both directions, it's cutting potential is inferior to the katana. A straight blade doesn't cut as well as a curved blade, and the way that japanese swordsmen trained was to use the curvature of the blade to it's maximum cutting potential as opposed to the brutal "hacking" that straight swords are primarily intended for.SakSak said:Along with of course a straight, double-edged sword being able to cut to both directions equally well and be an efficient piercer as well.
If you are to cut with a straight blade then you have to jerk the blade forwards or backwards, (which would be an awkward motion in a real swordfight) which means that all you can do with it is to hack and not really cut.
'Jerking' the blade to 'hack' requires a minimal effort when the blade is razor sharp & its cutting flesh. Buy a chicken, get a new sharp kitchen knife & play for 10 seconds to see what would happen.
What swordsmen did was draw the blade, thrusting forwards and if failing to open the target draw back as part of the intial attack cutting with the return to posture. More of a saw than a hack. A katana 'hacks' since the cutting edge is a curve and a thrust intended to cut would be unable to to do damage on the return.
As an aside:-
A Barret would be superior if it had a UBGL 40mm fitted to say any other Barret. Since the grenade launcher adds high explosive, HEDP, smoke, CS, rubber bullets, flares, IR illumination & shotgun loads to the rifles AM abilities. The only reason it wouldnt be considered is weight & encumberance. The analogy is flawed.