Syeed Ali
White Belt
I'm working on a novel and I have a significant story element which has the heroes aiming to fight against a man with a sword that can cut anything trivially. I'm thinking it would be a moderate-long one-edged sword made for one hand and with a minimal guard. These aspects would give me a number of weaknesses to work with.
The heroes have access to any strictly-melee low-tech arms and armament, are able to be trained in any way and are expert enough to learn, but only one can fight at a time.
The man is superior to them in every physical way -- strength, endurance, dexterity. He is immune to simple "cuts". His limitations are with speed and experience.
Given that he has learned to be excellent with the styles of his region (think the familiar Viking and European medieval stuff), the primary vector for attack is to leverage those style weaknesses. The secondary would be the fact that he adapts quickly, but that adaptation itself can be predicted to open up for further weaknesses. (Think The Princess Bride's "I'm not really left-handed".
Some of the things which I've been considering in the order of the fight, are:
- Armor that's sacrificial, to act as bait.
- Artifice in some manner; though a shield would technically be useless, it's visual cover and could be useful for feigns. Maybe falsifying unawareness, exhaustion or wounds.
- Accepting wounds as inevitable.
- Attempting to control the sword well enough for a self-cut (how realistic is this?)
- Dodging in various ways, and going for his legs
- Attacking his hands to train his adaptation, then attacking his elbows.
- Controlling the sword -- either by baiting for a thrust and controlling its back or the flat.
- Attempting to disarm or capture.
- Unarmed combat specific for controlling the hands and working with joints
I've got ideas through varieties of unarmed martial arts, but I don't know enough about swords or other weapons. The target audience would be comfortable with the classic choreography-fu of movies and wouldn't be picky enough with actual realism.
Are there other notions or techniques that I ought to look into, or specific martial arts that have an approach to swords? Jujutsu seems obvious, but anything with lots of distraction and motion might work well when exaggerated in fiction.
I'm open to ideas like "Begin with Iado, play with some Baguazhang, get close and do some Judo, you need to get the disarm in and look to stylistic old wrestling for reader interest, then the nastier locks being used in early western MMA fights."
The heroes have access to any strictly-melee low-tech arms and armament, are able to be trained in any way and are expert enough to learn, but only one can fight at a time.
The man is superior to them in every physical way -- strength, endurance, dexterity. He is immune to simple "cuts". His limitations are with speed and experience.
Given that he has learned to be excellent with the styles of his region (think the familiar Viking and European medieval stuff), the primary vector for attack is to leverage those style weaknesses. The secondary would be the fact that he adapts quickly, but that adaptation itself can be predicted to open up for further weaknesses. (Think The Princess Bride's "I'm not really left-handed".
Some of the things which I've been considering in the order of the fight, are:
- Armor that's sacrificial, to act as bait.
- Artifice in some manner; though a shield would technically be useless, it's visual cover and could be useful for feigns. Maybe falsifying unawareness, exhaustion or wounds.
- Accepting wounds as inevitable.
- Attempting to control the sword well enough for a self-cut (how realistic is this?)
- Dodging in various ways, and going for his legs
- Attacking his hands to train his adaptation, then attacking his elbows.
- Controlling the sword -- either by baiting for a thrust and controlling its back or the flat.
- Attempting to disarm or capture.
- Unarmed combat specific for controlling the hands and working with joints
I've got ideas through varieties of unarmed martial arts, but I don't know enough about swords or other weapons. The target audience would be comfortable with the classic choreography-fu of movies and wouldn't be picky enough with actual realism.
Are there other notions or techniques that I ought to look into, or specific martial arts that have an approach to swords? Jujutsu seems obvious, but anything with lots of distraction and motion might work well when exaggerated in fiction.
I'm open to ideas like "Begin with Iado, play with some Baguazhang, get close and do some Judo, you need to get the disarm in and look to stylistic old wrestling for reader interest, then the nastier locks being used in early western MMA fights."