A decent portion of Japanese sword fighting techniques revolve around how to not break your sword in half while using it. That’s not a concern with Damascus steel swords
The katana bends and gets like unusable (the soft back only makes it more bendable) while a normal eurobean sword would maybe have a stratch on the edges.
At least i think it was like this when i saw a documentary a while ago where they fixated the swords at a table and swinged with power on the other, with the fixated katana i itnk booth had a defect in on the cutting edge but weh the eurobean smord was fixated the katana had enough room to bend
So yea the soft “whoa it is more flexible and agile” part is the weak point
There was a documentation where they had a weapon smith that used medieval techniques. He made an normal European sword and a katana from around the same time.
When he used the katana to cut through the sword it broke.
I wonder how an authentically-made katana would do against an authentically-made Damascus steel sword?
A decent portion of Japanese sword fighting techniques revolve around how to not break your sword in half while using it. That’s not a concern with Damascus steel swords
The katana bends and gets like unusable (the soft back only makes it more bendable) while a normal eurobean sword would maybe have a stratch on the edges.
At least i think it was like this when i saw a documentary a while ago where they fixated the swords at a table and swinged with power on the other, with the fixated katana i itnk booth had a defect in on the cutting edge but weh the eurobean smord was fixated the katana had enough room to bend
So yea the soft “whoa it is more flexible and agile” part is the weak point
There was a documentation where they had a weapon smith that used medieval techniques. He made an normal European sword and a katana from around the same time.
When he used the katana to cut through the sword it broke.