While it may not be a flowery Drunken style stance... Foot possitions are VITAL. Someone in Platemail who doesn't know how to move around in it... is useless.
Isn't that exactly what the Armor Use skill is for?
What is REALLY happening is you practice soo much that the stances and style become second nature.
Mind you... this is only for the people who actually train. There are plenty of books on how to fight in Europe and they do include footwork and stances. (Heck just check out Fencing!)
Isn't that the point I was making? That stances and styles were
a part of training to use a weapon? I think you completely misunderstood what was said. I never said movement was unimportant. I said, "not any one specific style or stance" - not to say that position, movement, style were unimportant, but that you don't learn ONE style or stance or position -- you learn many ways to use a weapon. You learn to use a weapon.
You openly disagree with me, but that's precisely the point I was trying to make. That styles and stances aren't seperate, that they are fundamentally a part of weapon training.
Alright there are two problems here
My apologies for placing the "sap" response so close to the "stances and styles" -- i should have differentiated that I wasn't talking about the same thing.
2) dying with one strike... and often being unable to kill your opponent with your weapon... would change how the martial art functioned.
This is starting to smell fishy...
"Bashing weapons should have a chance to knock out when ambushing?"
No, lets not do any magical effects with mundane weapons here. If the Blunt weapon happens to knock someone out instead of killing them... Then good!
However lets not give it a bonus for no reason. Being struck in the head with a Warhammer, your dead.
To knock them out you would have to do so intentionally attempting to do as little damage as possible. So knocking someone out with an obviously deadly weapon should be intentional rather then as a side-effect of an unrelated skill.
You don't even properly quote me on what was said. I should have differentiated the topics a bit more. My fault. But I said this:
A "sap" used to knock somebody unconscious, primarily for adventure mode might not be a terrible idea.
I wasn't even talking about normal combat. Anyhow, if I may ask, how come people get killed in fist fights? People get hit once or twice and get killed. It's not an spectacularly common occurrence, but it does happen.
Secondly, in one of my previous posts I mentioned how hitting somebody with a helmet on and stunning them is completely preposterous. I was working on the basis that this
must not be the case since I already established that it's unlikely to be possible
with a helmet.
I never said we should give 1-hit kills in regular combat to heavily armored units just because we wield a hammer or mace. Though, funny enough, I don't think it's entirely impossible to get really lucky if you have a high enough skill as it is.
1) Heavy Armored combat wasn't all that common... It was EXPENCIVE to field a squad of Dismounted knights (and more for them to be mounted)
I'm looking at this. And you may indeed have a point. It was certainly expensive to field a squad of knights. Then again, Knights weren't your common soldier, either. Commonly they also carried very nice, expensive, weapons and armor. Expensive indeed, and typically the Knights held some social or political rank of sorts.
However, not every soldier was a knight. Heavy armored combat does not implicitly imply Knights, nor does it imply plate-armor only. HAC standards I am familiar with are assumed to be of a quality near to chainmail - but certainly armor heavier than leather. I guess for DF purposes, medium or heavy armor. Again, my fault, I should have shared the definition I was using to avoid confusion.
But still. How does this relate to what was said? It's expensive. OK. So if you want tons of steel plate for your dwarves to walk around in, you need to do a lot of work (which translates to money). I don't see how that is relevant.
==
Normal western warfare -- Heavy Armored Combat and Eastern Martial Arts combat were terribly dissimilar
I see a third problem.
Many people dont acknowledge that Europe had Martial arts in the past. Especally armed Martial arts were widespread. To name are the German- and basing on that the French-, the Spain- and the Italian- fence-school (Fence from German "fechten" or "gefecht" which meant any kind of fight not only swordsplay) . They included also many secondary styles like the "half-sword" style which dealed with heavy armor fights.
These styles have many similiaritys to eastern martial arts as far as i can tell from my experience of "Aikido", "Aikiken" and "German Fence school"
There are differences sure cause a European sword had, in comparsion to a Katana which is also a "Sword", totally different characteristics f.e a useable crossguard. By this the styles of usage change - for example i would never block with a Katana in the same way way i block with a european sword because a medieval Katana is more likely to shatter at the edge. Speaking of edges the european sword has 2 (Long and short edge) while the Katana mostly only had 1 sharp edge and blunt "back".
Taking a look at this.. you seem to be discussing the similarities of western martial arts and eastern martial arts. I cited Heavy Armored Combat. Not martial arts specifically. The use of a sword is not always Heavy Armored Combat (but sometimes it is). The training -- the martial art -- is not the same as the application of the training -- the combat.
You seem to primarily focus on the martial arts aspects, while I did stated combat aspects. I also never said that Eastern and Western combats and martial arts didn't have similarities - I said they had some major dissimilarities -- which does not mean they had no similarities. I specifically said there is quite a difference between western application of combat, and eastern martial training. While some of the martial arts may have similar bases, the applications were certainly not always the same.
If I recall correctly, eastern cultures used shields far less commonly in combat than did western cultures. In fact a shield is definately a stereotype of western medieval combat.
This causes a big difference in styles. A sword v. a sword/shield can be a rather particularly difficult fight to fight for the man without the shield. He has more mobility perhaps, and definately more vision, but he also has a lot fewer places to put his word, and a lot fewer places to avoid his opponent's.