Works for the Indian Patah, but that's a very different use case
Yes. Poking/slashing a guy in the guts is not chopping wood.
Works for the Indian Patah, but that's a very different use case
I can't even tell what I'm supposed to be looking at in the photo.
There are Patah that are the length of a European sabre; more than 3 feet.Sort of. It’s a short, wide punch-dagger- similar to what Ryujin posted, but with blade dimensions more akin to a katar- with a forearm axe as well.
Right. That’s why said it was a punch dagger- that part on the weapon in the video is only a few inches long. Punch daggers rarely exceed a foot in blade length.There are Patah that are the length of a European sabre; more than 3 feet.
The smith was clearly more interested in punchy-choppy instead of punchy-slashy.If you're going to have a forearm blade on a punch dagger, it should run parallel to the entire forearm with (maybe) a short pointy bit going past the elbow - almost like a bearded axe. That way, you could at least get some slashing action while pulling back the dagger after a punch or on a backswing, and use the pointy bit for an elbow strike...
View attachment 280718
Thing is, if you look at the history of weapons, there’s a whole bunch of them that are impractical on some level, but still were made in enough quantities that we know about them. Some even still get used- as in, modern people are trained in the fighting techniques developed to use them.
I could easily see forearm axe/katar as being associated with some kind of institution or religion. Maybe forest ninja elves. A militant gnomish sect. A guild of one-handed thieves.