If you have the blade twisted away from you, as it should be, you're using your hips' natural energy... which is used in every martial art to deliver finishing blows. The blade is angled out as it travels too. You don't pull it towards you, just move side-to-side, and if you must, tug a little as you do.Decoy Doctorpus post=18.70517.694193 said:No. No they won't. They'll cut hay in half with a single swing. The shape of a scythe means swinging it 'at' someone is impossible, you'd need to move it past them then pull it towards you, no where near enough momentum to go through bone.Aries_Split post=18.70517.694186 said:Because the scythe was used as a tool for reaping hay. The Grim reaper used it for reaping souls. It has connotations to harvesting, that's why they associate Death, I.E The harvester of souls,with it. It all makes perfect sense when you think about it. Also, a sharpened Scythe will cut you in half with one swing. They are fairly suited for battle.
Conversely, they were pretty poorly made, as noted earlier. Even if "war scythes" were developed, it would only be to give serfs-turned-men-at-arms something they were already familiar with and pump up their morale with their fancy new tool, and only too late would they find out it was just as crappy as their scythe back home.
Just like the Russians giving citizen hordes SMGs during WW2. The rapid fire kept them happy long enough that they died for the cause and took a couple baddies down too.