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Though swords were not capable of truly cutting through plate armor, a fighter would not avoid striking edge blows against an armored opponent if it might bruise or stun him, knock him about, crack his helmet open, slice through straps and tear off pieces, or otherwise weaken his defense to a more effective technique.
While it is frequently stated that larger swords were produced to face heavier armorers, the fact is, over time, swords got larger as armor use declined, and then finally became lighter and thinner only as firearms eliminated the value of armor entirely (and the declining necessity of their use on diverse battlefields). Hence, swords intended for facing plate armor in Europe were narrower, stiffer, more tapered and acutely pointed. Large cutting blades by contrast were optimally designed to serve other purposes.
Are their any plans for ARMA to demonstrate a destructive test with even a not-so-good greatsword?
I recall one plate helmet that had very clear slight dents that looked as if someone had been hacking at it with a sword.
Now if we turn more towards modern day test cutting the thing that most strikes me in Jake's Reply is that modern day smiths are still today unable to replicate even passable greatswords. This is something I didn't know, not owning one or seeing any destructive tests of one. Are their any plans for ARMA to demonstrate a destructive test with even a not-so-good greatsword?
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