With such a wide and varied amount of fantasy that is available to game makers, I think that they would be even more reluctant to "limit" their options to just real life examples. The suspension of disbelief is much easier to maintain in video games than in most movies. Just my opinion and observations
James Brazas- Thank for the compliment. How can ARMA members help? Well, it's a difficult question because ARMA is most definitely not a stunt team nor a collection of stage combatants or choreographers. To make an ARMA push into the field would drastically alter what ARMA's successful vision has been for all these years.
This last summer when I was doing my certification testing with the SAFD, I was venting a few of my frustrations to one of the more understanding instructors.He understood my approach and suggested that I look at stage combat like learning a role. Coming from an acting background I understood that to mean that in this instance this "character" fought in this particular manner. He accurately observed that I always fight like "Allen". My martial arts training (both with ARMA, MMA training and others) had developed my personal "style" or physical accent if you will. An actor has to be able to look, move and fight like the character...not themselves. So if the character happened to fight poorly...that's the character...not me. So that helped a little bit. Understanding the art and craft of acting as well as combat is vital to making this system work. Now, can it still be done with accurate techniques? For the most part, yes. But it's never been an emphasis or a burning desire within the stage combat community or by audiences as a whole.
So back to your original question, what can ARMA members do? I'd say, keep researching and training and digging for truth and then get it published. Get it out there. Make videos, write books, submit articles. Most of these students especially, have no idea this stuff even exists. I actually have an article that is likely to be published in the next SAFD magazine, "The Fight Master". I wrote on the true broadsword and how it is not a medieval sword. I make the charge to readers to start using the correct term and then perhaps the organizations they belong to will change their terminology to the correct usage. It's just a little change, but it goes against everything that has been taught in the last 100 years of stage combat. So keep at it with your research! Knowledge is power. But that knowledge applied to medium is lasting!


