Do videogames portray Katanas realistically?
Do videogames portray Katanas realistically?
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>katana only folded 999 times.
and yet there's tons of videos of fat weebs cutting water bottles and shit
lmao
lol this is so badly edited
what a cheap ass sword. a fucking box cutter can cut through one of those bottles
>Chinese manufacturing
box cutters are higher quality
lol katanas are kinda shitty sure, but this dude is using a dull katana like a hammer.
box cutters are sharpened
Based diet coke
He didn't use a draw stance baka
>low effort trolling over katanas vs. broadswords is now over 11 years old
Box cutters are folded two thousand times nerd
>edited 999 times
why do weebs make such a big deal over their swords if a little box cutter is a more efficient weapon?
This is why you don't buy cheap $100 swords off eBay.
Lol katana to double edge
fyi shaving razors are basically as sharp as katanas supposedly are
shaving razors are sharp as fuck queer
Basically every possible edged thing is about the same amount of sharp if you put enough effort into sharpening it. There's that jap on youtube who makes knives out of ketchup and smoke and shit. It's neat stuff but it isn't really a demonstration of the cutting ability of tomato and sugar syrup, just that if you spend hours with the right technique you can get almost literally any uniform solid to a razor edge.
Except it's not trolling, katanas are objectively inferior because Nipponese metals were more impure than European ones.
Razors are super sharp
How is this edited
>when you cope hard, but also are bad at editing.
can i get a name on this jap?
>his knife wasn't kneaded 1000 times
Katanas are inferior to Renaissance-era Zweihänders, this is obviously true. But they also serve completely different purposes and use completely different smithing methods due to the availability of material. For the completely awful quality of metals Japan had access to, they made a really functional set of weaponry. They couldn't traditionally forge and hammer into shape from a solid blank because of the amount of impurities, hence the folding.
If you compare actual Japanese and European weapons used for war such as polearms, they don't really differ that much.
youtube.com
There's the smoke one
>buys a plastic prop
>nearly breaks it trying to cut another piece of plastic
lol
I hope someone gets this
they used to be more frequent a while back
Why didn't samurai fight with superior bottles of diet coke?