D&D (2024) What, exactly, is a 5e "scimitar"?

Yaarel

He Mage
D&DD uses bizarro arms andarmor and infectted all fantasy since.

Any nonfirearm weapon or armor from 0BC to 1700AD is a "Standard Fantasy" weapon or armor. Legioaires vs Ninjas vs Knights vs Pirates vs Kung Fu Monks.
Heh. My first concern is "what the hell is this"?!

My second concern is what weapons are appropriate for a specific setting − whether a world setting or a local setting.



@Sepulchrave II

Yeah, for me, the phrase "Ottoman Period" is identical to the "Modern Period", in the same sense that the Renaissance Period is modern.

These smaller agile curved swords are untypical, or dont exist at all, during the Medieval Period. But once one gets into the Modern Period like a full suit of plate armor in the 1500s or a pirate ship in the 1600s, then these agile curved sword fit well enough in the setting.

The rapier (actually a very thin longsword) is similarly modern.
 

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@Sepulchrave II

Yeah, for me, the phrase "Ottoman Period" is identical to the "Modern Period", in the same sense that the Renaissance Period is modern.

These smaller agile curved swords are untypical, or dont exist at all, during the Medieval Period. But once one gets into the Modern Period like a full suit of plate armor in the 1500s or a pirate ship in the 1600s, then these agile curved sword fit well enough in the setting.
Fair enough, although if you're trying to find a non-anachronistic equivalent, you might be hard-pressed.

Form follows function, as they say, and there's a reason the shamshir, paramerion etc. are 3-4 feet long, as they're designed to be used with a downward slashing motion from horseback.

If you can find a function for a 2-3 foot medieval light curved slashing sword, then you'll be able to find a form. Otherwise, I'm afraid it's just a D&Dism.
 

Horwath

Legend
This is why I use this table.

Weapon traits&damage is 1st to be picked. It's important for game math.

then you flavor your weapon to whatever real life or fantasy can be closest to your design of character.

Weapon traitsSimple weapon damageexampleMartial weapon damageexample
1Handed, Versatiled8(d10)maced10(d12)longsword
1Handed, Thrownd6javelind8trident
1Handed, finessed6long knifed8rapier
1Handed, lightd6clubd8arming sword
1Handed, reach, Versatiled6 (d8)speard8(d10)partisan
1Handed, finesse, lightd4daggerd6shorsword
1Handed, finesse, reachd4whipd6dagger whip
1Handed, finesse, thrownd4dartd6throwing hammer
1Handed, light, thrownd4pillumd6throwing axe
1Handed, finesse, light, thrownd3throwing knifed4chakram
2Handed, heavy2d6warmace2d8greatsword
2Handedd12greatclub2d6claymore
2Handed, heavy, reachd12pike2d6pole-ax
2Handed, reachd10longspeard12glaive
2Handed, finessed10bo staffd12elven courtblade
2Handed, finesse, reachd8elven speard10spiked chain
 

Charlaquin

Goblin Queen (She/Her/Hers)
It’s a curved sword that’s light enough to dual-world. Beyond that, the description is pretty much up to the player or DM.
 

Peter BOSCO'S

Adventurer
They're weapons that almost never get used because they cost 25 GP and the functionally identical, except pierceing, Shortsword is only 10GP. Few L1 characters are rich enough to want to pay the extra 15 GP, and few higher level characters every bother to switch.
 

Yaarel

He Mage
Fair enough, although if you're trying to find a non-anachronistic equivalent, you might be hard-pressed. ... Otherwise, I'm afraid it's just a D&Dism.
Heh. Now I can only imagine a "Druid" wielding a cutlass. Aarrgh, matey.



Here is a list of modern weapons and armor. For me, the 1500s onward is modern. But the 1400s can be either medieval or modern, depending on where one is.

MODERN ARMOR
Plate: 1500s, but breastplate over chain is 1300s

MODERN WEAPON
Longsword: mainly 1400s, but odd ones 1100s
Greatsword (Zweihänder): 1500s
Rapier: 1500s-1600s
Scimitar (Cutlass): 1600s-1800s, but odd ones 1500s
Pike (12-25 feet): 1400s-1500s, but ancient ones
Glaive: 1400s-1600s, but Japan naginata 1100s on
 

Tonguez

A suffusion of yellow
Its a thin curved single edge blade of persian design used by swashbucklers, and desert rogue-princes, that druids can sub for a sickle.
 

Minigiant

Legend
Supporter
They're weapons that almost never get used because they cost 25 GP and the functionally identical, except pierceing, Shortsword is only 10GP. Few L1 characters are rich enough to want to pay the extra 15 GP, and few higher level characters every bother to switch.
5e simplified weapons too much. Even Grognards think it's too simple.

The 4e scimitar was a longsword that was High Crit instead of Versatile.
The 3e scimitar was a shortsword that crit on and 18 or better.

One D&D should bring back keen or high crit and give it to scimatar. Or bring back Scimitar Dance that deals DEX mod damage on a miss
 

MNblockhead

A Title Much Cooler Than Anything on the Old Site
For a nonmagical weapons table to be meaningful, I prefer to have a reallife analogue in mind, better yet a historical one. But there seems to be none for the "scimitar" the 5e Weapons Table describes.



Compare the "falchion". Most falchions come from the Renaissance Period. The artwork from illuminated manuscripts can sometimes be highly stylistic thus the shapes and lengths of the blades might not exist in reallife. That said, here are some examples of weapons called "falchions" in Renaissance artwork from the latter 1400s. (The image is unsourced but is in a credible context in a forum discussion.)

falchion_forms1.jpg


Three of the six appear to be normal sabers. One looks like a stylized saber. One looks like it might be a reuse of a damaged saber. The one at the right seems realistic and its blade looks unusually broad.

Huh... To me, the 3rd and 4th ones from the left seem to be demonstrating cutting actions. Piercing in the 3rd and slashing in the fourth. The lines representing the cut.
 

Hriston

Dungeon Master of Middle-earth
I do think of the seax as more of a stabbing weapon, but then again I don’t care much about historical accuracy. (But I will die on the hill of metallurgical accuracy…)
If it wasn’t obvious from my use of the word sword, I was thinking more of a long seax rather than a scramseax, which I believe would fall into the dagger category in D&D.
 

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