Having been a HEMA practicioner for nearly twenty years now, I believe most of the problem is simply hollywoodism combined with the incredibly horrible sword designs in games. A longsword, which is a sword about 48 inches long overall, two handed, and with a weight of 2.8 to 3.5 pounds on average, is not particularly hard to use. I've trained and trained with women of almost every physical body type.
Another misconception is that a physically strong person has to be bulky and bulging muscles. This is the exact opposite of the reality for useful muscle mass. Useful muscles tend to be long and thin, and yes, that means that most of the scariest strongest fighting people in the world look like they're beanpoles.
Parries are not what hollywood and games show. You do not, ever, get into that blade on blade shoving match. If you try against someone who is even halfway trained, you will lose. The term is bindun und windun, Binding and Winding, you have to tell, instantly at the bind, if they are soft or hard at the bind. This tells you how you should behave. But the idea is that you go around their blade, not through it.
Another common myth is that swords can cut through armor. They can't, Period. Dot. You may be able to thrust through some types, and through weak points.
If you really want to know what longsword work is like, look up ARMA on youtube or at thearma.org. ARMA in this case being the Association for Renaissance Martial Arts, one of the leading HEMA groups. Yes, John Clements is a bit of a jackass at times, especially in writing, but he does know what he's talking about.
Edit: And finishing reading after posting this, (I was posting for the commenters not the author), I see he already links to the ARMA website.
Another misconception is that a physically strong person has to be bulky and bulging muscles. This is the exact opposite of the reality for useful muscle mass. Useful muscles tend to be long and thin, and yes, that means that most of the scariest strongest fighting people in the world look like they're beanpoles.
Parries are not what hollywood and games show. You do not, ever, get into that blade on blade shoving match. If you try against someone who is even halfway trained, you will lose. The term is bindun und windun, Binding and Winding, you have to tell, instantly at the bind, if they are soft or hard at the bind. This tells you how you should behave. But the idea is that you go around their blade, not through it.
Another common myth is that swords can cut through armor. They can't, Period. Dot. You may be able to thrust through some types, and through weak points.
If you really want to know what longsword work is like, look up ARMA on youtube or at thearma.org. ARMA in this case being the Association for Renaissance Martial Arts, one of the leading HEMA groups. Yes, John Clements is a bit of a jackass at times, especially in writing, but he does know what he's talking about.
Edit: And finishing reading after posting this, (I was posting for the commenters not the author), I see he already links to the ARMA website.