I think two bladed sword idea, which springs from either Dungeons and Dragons or Star Wars, is idiotic, with all due respect.
Such a weapon was featured in one of the Star Wars movies. My personal favorite example is in John Marco's "Tyrants and Kings" series, where the weapon can be separated into two sabers. This goes back to the original problem, being that two swords would be more useful than two joined together.
Well, if it's polearms you're thinking about, there is sort of a historical parallel. Many polearms were made with spiked buttcaps, which had all sorts of useful poking applications. I don't know of any two-bladed glaives, though. It seems to me that one would be vulnerable in the middle with something like that. Also, remember there's nothing you can do with two blades on a sword that you can't do with one.
True. But wouldn’t poking applications be even more fun if you could slash at your opponent with the backhand? As to there being no advantages, the only thing I could foresee would be the use of leverage in close quarters, at which point you're weapon would probably be useless anyway.
Alas M Argento, the catalog wherein I saw the double bladed thing was found on a sidewalk...
And the relative entertainment value being somewhat low, it soon enough was cast into oblivion.
Might consider having your character use a billhook. Could get firewood and murder people all in one tool.
No problem. The billhook thing would be a bit harder though, since I outfitted nearly half of one of my created race's army with them. <img src="/forum/images/icons/grin.gif" alt="" />
For one blade of your sword to be effective, you must have it pointed at the opponent (the tenet of "point always online" here). Well, if that is the case, by default you always have a sword tip pointed online at you! - Your own other blade. Likewise, for a sword to cut, you must describe a nice arc according to the cut attempted. The parallel inverse arc would thus be cutting back on you! (I.e., an oberhau to him becomes a simultaneous unterhau to you). I have enough worry keeping the opponent's blade from within my danger zone without having to worry about two blades in it (his and my own!) I think that a double-edged sword is a fine thing, but double bladed becomes (excuse the pun) more of a "double-edged sword" to you as the linear nature of it forces a blade at you every time you force one to the opponent
Hmmm... I suppose I could see that. One blade is always in the opposite line, but I chose to see this as an opportunity to instantly reverse the direction of your attack instead of to hurt yourself. If the weapon were held diagonally across the body, with one point towards the opponent and one pointing behind you perhaps? Then again, its hard to imagine what the contacts of a staff to your body would do were the weapon edged.
An afterthought: Perhaps such an implement, though not as practical in combat, would serve as a more efficient harvester of wheat? If used in a scything motion from one side of the body to the other, then number of cuts to the wheat would effectively double in efficiency.
Again, I only intended to discover what made such a weapon impractical, so that it had never been used historically.



