One of the massive 5' steel blades hanging in my closet. I'm a renaissance LARPer. They come in useful.Hobot wrote:When you say broadsword, what kind of sword are you referring to exactly?
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One of the massive 5' steel blades hanging in my closet. I'm a renaissance LARPer. They come in useful.Hobot wrote:When you say broadsword, what kind of sword are you referring to exactly?
"It?" I think you mean "they."Hobot wrote:Is it a claymore?
No. If soldiers today were given invincible armor, bullets would still injure.Tom_Aurum wrote:Yadda. My personal theory is when personal or suit armor manages to outpower the ranged weapons of the day, then swords will be useful, as they may be more easily designed to cut through armor.
Also, in shipboard combat swords and daggers prove to be useful, especially if you plan on taking the ship without blasting through the hull and losing cabin pressure. This is among one of the main reasons why al-qaida used knives to take over the aircraft on that fateful day about a year and a half ago.
Technically, you're right. The term "broadsword" was really used to describe what are now more commonly referred to as rapiers (similar in grip and length to fencing foils). But those are sissy swords. I use the term "broadsword" loosely, because it's so much easier than calling it a Medieval sword, and they're not warswords or longswords. Logswords reached up to 6' in length, and were carried by the king. Warswords only got to be about 3.5', as they were much quicker and easier to manage on the battlefield. I use what were more commonly referred to as Knightsarms or Knightswords. These swords had 4' blades, and were only carried by the strongest of the warriors, who also often rode horseback.Hobot wrote:Yes, I meant "they"
I was just asking because I find a lot of people tend to use the term "broadsword" incorrectly. They often use it when referring to medieval swords when it's really at 17th century sword (and funnily enough is not as wide as a longsword or warsword).
Shinova wrote:I think swords might still be a little useful if you could compress them like how you compress the Minbari fighting pike. Your captors think you're disarmed and suddenly you slash their chests open or decapitate them.
It's been tried before, with no success. The thing with swords is that they're extremely high-impact weapons. They're made to stand up against shield deflections, armor hits, and parries. The joints needed to make a blade retract could never stand that kind of wear-and-tear. The pikes are a bit easier, as they're simply piercing weapons, and the impact is only one-way. It's easy to reinforce collapsable joints with the movement is only going in one direction. Because of the variety of possible attacks with a sword, though, the unreliability is much higher.Grand Admiral Thrawn wrote:Shinova wrote:I think swords might still be a little useful if you could compress them like how you compress the Minbari fighting pike. Your captors think you're disarmed and suddenly you slash their chests open or decapitate them.
Do you people think?
Umm... are ducks the enemy?Captain Lennox wrote:No, no, no. I prefer to make my enemy's head explode. Example: that duck that lost it's head when I went hunting.
The "pike" Shinova is describing is a blunt instrument, wielded like a quarterstaff.Queeb Salaron wrote:The pikes are a bit easier, as they're simply piercing weapons, ...Shinova wrote:I think swords might still be a little useful if you could compress them like how you compress the Minbari fighting pike. Your captors think you're disarmed and suddenly you slash their chests open or decapitate them.
Hmm. Retractable quarterstaffs? I can't imagine they're very effective.Ted C wrote:The "pike" Shinova is describing is a blunt instrument, wielded like a quarterstaff.
Yes, everyone is the enemy. Didn't the College of Future Paranoid World leaders teach you anything?Queeb Salaron wrote:Umm... are ducks the enemy?Captain Lennox wrote:No, no, no. I prefer to make my enemy's head explode. Example: that duck that lost it's head when I went hunting.
Man, and here I was shooting the invading squirrels. Boy, do I feel dumb.
Yes. That school is the enemy. So I stopped going.Captain Lennox wrote:Yes, everyone is the enemy. Didn't the College of Future Paranoid World leaders teach you anything?
I think enough to assume that "Future" as the thread title indicates, could mean any length of time.Grand Admiral Thrawn wrote:Shinova wrote:I think swords might still be a little useful if you could compress them like how you compress the Minbari fighting pike. Your captors think you're disarmed and suddenly you slash their chests open or decapitate them.
Do you people think?
A) Wrong. With the armor, you're eventually going to smack right up against the limits of what you can do with alloys or composits and still have a soldier that can have some hope of walking around. And I can still unload an AK-47 clip into the soldier of the future and knock him or her down and make life distinctly unpleasant for that soldier. And there's that little problem of the sword suffering from the same materials restriction, and that other little problem of a sword carrying nowhere near the kinetic energy of a bullet.Tom_Aurum wrote:Yadda. My personal theory is when personal or suit armor manages to outpower the ranged weapons of the day, then swords will be useful, as they may be more easily designed to cut through armor. Also, in shipboard combat swords and daggers prove to be useful, especially if you plan on taking the ship without blasting through the hull and losing cabin pressure. This is among one of the main reasons why al-qaida used knives to take over the aircraft on that fateful day about a year and a half ago.
But a sword is completely unsuited for just about any combat scenario you could think of in a high-tech scifi world. Sure they might come back into vogue someday as primary combat weapons, but in that case, you'd have a Fallout-style low-tech post-apocalyptic wasteland sort of future.Shinova wrote:I think enough to assume that "Future" as the thread title indicates, could mean any length of time.Grand Admiral Thrawn wrote:Shinova wrote:I think swords might still be a little useful if you could compress them like how you compress the Minbari fighting pike. Your captors think you're disarmed and suddenly you slash their chests open or decapitate them.
Do you people think?
Just cause it's not possible or feasible today doesn't mean it's still not a thousand years later.
Join the SCA, my friendDarth Pounder wrote:I like the idea of Swords comming back into war and ranged weaponary going the way of the dodo. I would depend on the concept of honour comming back into battle. Even a boy can pull a trigger or press a red button but it takes a man wo weild a full sized sword and kill in single combat.
Shinova wrote:I think enough to assume that "Future" as the thread title indicates, could mean any length of time.Grand Admiral Thrawn wrote:Shinova wrote:I think swords might still be a little useful if you could compress them like how you compress the Minbari fighting pike. Your captors think you're disarmed and suddenly you slash their chests open or decapitate them.
Do you people think?
Just cause it's not possible or feasible today doesn't mean it's still not a thousand years later.
Well, it is difficult but it happens. A friend of mine was in a WW2 reenactment where some of the local Confederate Air Force guys brought a couple of P-51s to play, and the German side had a SdKfz 250/1 half-track... I've heard tales of a Vietnam reenactment group with a M-113 APC but no aircraft as far as I know.Queeb Salaron wrote:... will probably never see Vietnam or Gulf War reenactments, simply due to the fact that there have to be planes and helicopters involved. LARP groups often don't have the resources to get military aircraft involved in faux battles...