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English longbow or yumi? - Printable Version +- Discovery Gaming Community (https://discoverygc.com/forums) +-- Forum: The Community (https://discoverygc.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=4) +--- Forum: Flood (https://discoverygc.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=19) +--- Thread: English longbow or yumi? (/showthread.php?tid=101974) |
English longbow or yumi? - Strichev - 07-16-2013 For us, who get roflstomped in close combat due to the lack of proper coordination and brute physical strength the bow is the answer. Why bother at close range when you can just shoot them? Yes, the entire debate is pointless. Just the same as with the swords... RE: English longbow or yumi? - Jack_Henderson - 07-16-2013 What is a Yumi?
RE: English longbow or yumi? - Stoat - 07-16-2013 Japanese bow. There are three or four different types iirc. For me the english longbow takes the prize, simply for their immense power. The biggest war bows were around the 180lb draw at 30". Long term users of bows of this stature were deformed simply because of the strength required to even draw the bow, let alone fire it accurately. RE: English longbow or yumi? - Benjamin - 07-16-2013 samurai were archers, but in England the peasants used bows... yumi probably had better table manners RE: English longbow or yumi? - SummerMcLovin - 07-16-2013 Japanese bow that was about 2 metres tall (so taller than a person). I'd say the longbow as it seems to be less awkward, but the Yumi was excellent for horse-mounted archers (which the samurai favoured). Longbows were not suitable in their design and use for Europeans to use on horseback, with shorter bows (until they started making composites, particularly the Mongols and their raiders) not having the required draw strength. RE: English longbow or yumi? - Stoat - 07-16-2013 (07-16-2013, 03:24 PM)Benjamin Wrote: samurai were archers, but in England the peasants used bows... yumi probably had better table manners The English peasants were no less archers just because they were poor. They trained every day, from childhood. Their effectiveness in the many wars with France are testament to that RE: English longbow or yumi? - Benjamin - 07-16-2013 oh yeah, I was just making a pithy comment on their relative social class. there's that great quote about how if you want to make a good (English longbow) archer, first start with his grandfather. evidence for it, I'm pretty sure there's no one around today who can really properly use the size/draw weights of the bows you mentioned above RE: English longbow or yumi? - JaaY - 07-22-2013 I googled "yumi". Found an asian girl. *scratches head* RE: English longbow or yumi? - Soul Reaper - 07-22-2013 (07-16-2013, 03:06 PM)Sokol Wrote: For us, who get roflstomped in close combat due to the lack of proper coordination and brute physical strength... Actually, considering the fact that English bowmen trained with the longbow since childhood and afterwards when the used a real longbow, the strength required to pull the thing back would be enough to make them extremely strong men, even more so than sword-fighters probably. RE: English longbow or yumi? - Reid - 07-22-2013 Longbow, because without it Henry would have gotten his head kicked in at Agincourt |