kzt wrote:The single edged slashing sword was a step most military cultures went through, then they evolved into designs that were more useful. Japan not changing had a bunch of cultural and actual tactical reasons, none of which would apply to Grayson.
But Grayson is rather stubborn (understatement of the week

), so they may have decided to stick with their imitation katana's, whether they were useful & functional or not.
And also look how long it took for Grayson to even start adapting to the information Manticore brought with it. It took Honor training with the sword herself (and the second highest ranking sword master), for the beginning of comparisons and change to even begin. And said sword master looking at true Kendo, not just the created Grayson version, and thinking how he can incorporate dual wielding, and form changes to win the championship.
Rocket88 wrote:This is important when wearing a sword on belt, or as in the case of a Japanese Katana, stuck thru a sash; because the vertically oriented quillions won't jab you in the gut like in the drawings in HOS.
I was under the impression that true Katana's didn't have any quillions at all. They were always in a scabbard that just about exactly fit the blade, and were always belted (or at least on a ribbon that served as a 'belt'). Unlike more Western blades, which needed the quillions not just as a hand guard, but to anchor the blade when thrust through the belt if it wasn't scabbarded.
Katana's without the guard could be said to be similar to Star Wars lightsabers of the original trilogy. Darth Vader vs Obi-Wan on the first Death Star, Luke vs Darth (pick any of the fights), or even some of the unmentionable fights during the prequels (non-Dooku anyways). No quillions to protect the wielders fingers and hand, they used elaborate and practical disengages and parries to protect the hand.
Any sword wielding fighter with training should know how to handle the interlocked blades and rely on skill not quillions to protect their hand. At least in the more highly trained and practiced Samurai, as compared to a European noble who more typically
played at sword fighting anyways.