Break into my house, *****. I dare you, I double dare you...
(This isn't a photo of the sword I have but it looks exactly like the one in the picture above)
I'm a airsoft noob...Koeryn said:Heckler and KOCH, and at 400FPS, it's airsoft, I'm asking if it's the new Gas Blowback from WE Tech. =p And I hate you 'cause I can't afford one! =pjoschen said:Its a Heckler and Kosh 416.Koeryn said:I hope you know that I hate you now! Is that the GBB 416?joschen said:400 fps unbridled wrath!
WHY DO YOU HATE ME?!
Who? Them? Him? Me?teutonicman said:Why do you have so many weapons? Are you a practitioner or just a collector?
I look at it the opposite way: Most things are suitable weapons. If they double as tools, that's even better.xitel said:Exactly what I was thinking. The sledgehammer's even worse. Personally, because I consider all my knives to be tools, not weapons, I don't have any. But if you want to count knives, then I have around two dozen weapons. Not to mention being an avid street fighter means I can turn damn near anything in arm's reach into a weapon of sorts.DuplicateValue said:Since when do razors count as weapons? Someone's watched Sweeny Todd one too many times.
Katanas really aren't well suited for close quarters combat... I don't understand the obsession with them, but then, I hate Japanophiles to begin with. Really, they're too weak to be valid as a sword. They're a slashing weapon, but they're too big to be as effective as a rapier or the like, and they're too light to be as useful as a bastard sword or longsword is for chopping. In close quarters combat like inside a house, a knife is far more effective, seeing as how darting stabs and mobility are key.AndyFromMonday said:![]()
Break into my house, *****. I dare you, I double dare you...
(This isn't a photo of the sword I have but it looks exactly like the one in the picture above)
They're battlefield weapons, the curvature of the blade and sharpness of the edge as well as the tempering methods used by fuedal japanese swordsmiths turned sub-par iron-ore sand into exceptionally durable and keen weapons. The "Magic" of the Katana is that it is light, durable and will hold an edge while the form of the blade lends itself to slashing attacks in a way seen few other places on earth until the advent of the sabre. Smaller thrusting weapons were relatively unkonwn in japan as the culture focused more around the fluid motion of the martial arts, always maintaining balance and control over one's body while being able to deliver a finishing blow at the earliest opportunity. Ironically, the word "Katana" means literally "large knife".xitel said:Katanas really aren't well suited for close quarters combat... I don't understand the obsession with them, but then, I hate Japanophiles to begin with. Really, they're too weak to be valid as a sword. They're a slashing weapon, but they're too big to be as effective as a rapier or the like, and they're too light to be as useful as a bastard sword or longsword is for chopping. In close quarters combat like inside a house, a knife is far more effective, seeing as how darting stabs and mobility are key.
It was a gift to begin with and it's a nice ornament that has it's place on top of my wardrobe.xitel said:Katanas really aren't well suited for close quarters combat... I don't understand the obsession with them, but then, I hate Japanophiles to begin with. Really, they're too weak to be valid as a sword. They're a slashing weapon, but they're too big to be as effective as a rapier or the like, and they're too light to be as useful as a bastard sword or longsword is for chopping. In close quarters combat like inside a house, a knife is far more effective, seeing as how darting stabs and mobility are key.AndyFromMonday said:![]()
Break into my house, *****. I dare you, I double dare you...
(This isn't a photo of the sword I have but it looks exactly like the one in the picture above)