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Using a rapier with sword and shield style?

Started by Creslin, April 08, 2004, 07:33:45 AM

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Creslin

Hey all, I'm new to TROS, and I only have a mild understanding of the rules.  So anyway, I read in the book that you can use something like a short club with sword and shield style, provided that you use it like a sword (i.e. use the manuevers from S&S style, NOT mass weapon and shield).  So my question is could I use a rapier with sword and shield style (provided that I use it as I would say...a short sword)?  Or is it impossible to use one without the rapier proficiency?

Thanks!

Tash

I'm sure Rapier has a default for sword/shield style, but you would be limited to thrust attacks only.  Its probably not very high either.  A club is actually used more like a sword than a rapier is.
"And even triumph is bitter, when only the battle is counted..."  - Samael "Rebellion"

MonkeyWrench

I don't see why not.  I mean the image of wieding a rapier/buckler combination is pretty classic (IMHO at least), but you're definetely going to be better off using your rapier prof so that you can take advantages of the extended maneuvers list.
-Jim

Tash

I think the circumstances would be roughly alone the lines of: your sword and shield trained character is escaping from a dungeon and has no wepaons.  Suddenly he is confronted by guards, they are bearing down on him, swords drawn when he spots one of these new rapier things he's hear about hanging in a case by the wall....

That's what the defaults are for.
"And even triumph is bitter, when only the battle is counted..."  - Samael "Rebellion"

Caz

There's no reason you'd be limited to thrusting attacks.  Rapiers are just unweildy at swung attacks, usually quite long, will do little damage, and may possibly break.

Tash

Everything I've read regarding the physics or swordplay, the techniques taught by masters of the rapier (Johnny Depp adn Orlando Bloom do not count) during that time period, and the test cutting and sparring research done by groups like the ARMA points to one thing: rapiers don't have the mass, proper blade configuration, or the rigidity to create a lethal cut.  An annoying and painful cut yes, but not lethal.  If you want to kill someone with a rapier you stab them someplace important.

That's why there is no "Cut" move for rapiers in Riddle.
"And even triumph is bitter, when only the battle is counted..."  - Samael "Rebellion"

Lance D. Allen

but there IS cut damage for the rapier.

Also, I'm fairly sure that the weapons used in Pirates of the Caribbean were more representative of cut and thrust than rapier.
~Lance Allen
Wolves Den Publishing
Eternally Incipient Publisher of Mage Blade, ReCoil and Rats in the Walls

Caz

Cutlass, sabers, spadroons, smallswords.  Didn't notice any rapiers in that movie.

tauman

Hmmm... While I wouldn't claim that you're likely to kill anyone with a rapier cut, I think it is very possible that you might disable someone with a cut to the right place (forearm or lower leg). It doesn't really matter if you're still alive if you can't hold a weapon any more. Apparently, I'm not the only one who felt this way--Ridolfo Capo Ferro, Salvator Fabris, and Francesco Alfieri (among others) all include cutting techniques in their manuals (second in preference to thrusts, of course).

Steve Reich

Quote from: TashEverything I've read regarding the physics or swordplay, the techniques taught by masters of the rapier (Johnny Depp adn Orlando Bloom do not count) during that time period, and the test cutting and sparring research done by groups like the ARMA points to one thing: rapiers don't have the mass, proper blade configuration, or the rigidity to create a lethal cut.  An annoying and painful cut yes, but not lethal.  If you want to kill someone with a rapier you stab them someplace important.

That's why there is no "Cut" move for rapiers in Riddle.

Valamir

"Rapier" is a pretty broad term.

Saying "a rapier can or can't..." is like saying "a sword can or can't" but not distinguishing whether you're talking about a roman gladius, a norman blade, or a late period arming sword.

Rapiers varied in length, blade width, and heft quite a bit, with a general trend towards getting lighter.

Museums (who particularly like to classify things based on very questionable standards) particularly like to call some blades "sword-rapiers" because they are particularly heavy rapiers.

So whether or not a rapier can cut, depends largely on what actual blade you're talking about.  

Early rapiers especially still had enough features of a cut and thrust sword to be able to deliver cuts.  

Cutting motions with later rapiers were more likely to be tip slashes to the face or arms (some minor shock in TROS terms) than actual damaging blows.

Brian Leybourne

It comes down more to the style than the individual weapon, which is what the passage about Sword & Shield with clubs is really talking about.

DSwinging a club isn't astonishingly different from swinging a sword (but the result will be). However, you don't flourish a club/sword around in the same way you would a rapier, thus the shitty default. Something like Cut & Thrust style would be a far closer match for rapier use because it's a more similar style of using the weapon.

Brian.
Brian Leybourne
bleybourne@gmail.com

RPG Books: Of Beasts and Men, The Flower of Battle, The TROS Companion

Tash

Weren't those taught as distraction moves to escape from a bind or grapple, not as actual attacks?

The "Pirates" dig was a joke by the way.  Its an awesome movie (heck I named my puppy "Captain Jack") but not to be cited as an authority on any kind of swordfighting.

And I remember there being several rapier looking blades, definately some of the ones hanging in the smithy where they had that first fight, and the one Bloom made for the comadore looked like a long thrusting style rapier to me.

As for the types of rapiers, I was speaking specifically about the later thin bladed ones.  Earlier ones were still evolving out of the C&T type of blades and had many characteristics of both.  Should have been more specific what I was talking about.
"And even triumph is bitter, when only the battle is counted..."  - Samael "Rebellion"

tauman

By "those," do you mean cuts? The three named masters taught the cuts as valid attacks, not as tricks. They weren't tip cuts, nor were they taught as distractions. OTOH, all three also say that thrusts are safer and more lethal (safer because you don't take your point out of line and because a thrust only takes one tempo). The rapier of which they speak, was a double-edged weapon with a blade length of about 40"-42."

I assume by "later thin bladed" you mean the rapier as taught by Marcelli or Bondi di Mazo (i.e. late 1600s) that were on their way to evolving into smallswords?

Steve

Quote from: TashWeren't those taught as distraction moves to escape from a bind or grapple, not as actual attacks?

The "Pirates" dig was a joke by the way.  Its an awesome movie (heck I named my puppy "Captain Jack") but not to be cited as an authority on any kind of swordfighting.

And I remember there being several rapier looking blades, definately some of the ones hanging in the smithy where they had that first fight, and the one Bloom made for the comadore looked like a long thrusting style rapier to me.

As for the types of rapiers, I was speaking specifically about the later thin bladed ones.  Earlier ones were still evolving out of the C&T type of blades and had many characteristics of both.  Should have been more specific what I was talking about.

Tash

Yes, by "those" I mean the various cuts.  I had thought they were taugh as highly secondary mavuevers to be employed only when your point was alread off line and your oponent was closing inside (to trap, stab with his dagger, etc.).

And by the "later thin blade" I meant the later gneneration, longer rapiers (some topping 50") that sometimes didn't even have edges.
"And even triumph is bitter, when only the battle is counted..."  - Samael "Rebellion"

tauman

In my personal experience (and I'm certainly not a rapier master), I've found it does work well in situations where your point is offline and your opponent has made getting it online too difficult (perhaps because he's closing too fast). Also, I've found it works well on the left hand of an opponent who extends his hand to grab my blade.

As far as "highly-secondary," the masters I've read certainly highly prefer the thrust, but they do offer the cut as alternatives. Alfieri, for example, offers the cut as an option in 11 out of his 15 rapier-alone plates. Both Alfieri and Capo Ferro recommend the cut (basically, a stop-cut to the wrist/forearm) as an option against l'huomo bestiale (the bestial/wild opponent).

Still, the rapier is definitely a thrusting weapon and someone who approaches it with an emphasis on cutting will not do well. Certainly, it would be just about impossible to kill someone with a rapier cut without a very lucky strike.

Steve

Quote from: TashYes, by "those" I mean the various cuts.  I had thought they were taugh as highly secondary mavuevers to be employed only when your point was alread off line and your oponent was closing inside (to trap, stab with his dagger, etc.).

And by the "later thin blade" I meant the later gneneration, longer rapiers (some topping 50") that sometimes didn't even have edges.