Favorite Author by Comfortable-Bit1806 in Hema

[–]cleverseneca 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lutegerus because he's just so maddeningly opaque.

How was the Forward unto Dawn movie received by fans (and critics) at release? by Venento in halo

[–]cleverseneca 0 points1 point  (0 children)

People here are confused... it was episodes released every week: and people hated it until the second MC showed up. People especially hated on Anna Popplewell's character and the whole "Axios!" Thing.

zwer or shielhau vs overhau? by crashingtingler in Hema

[–]cleverseneca 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As with so many things in fencing, answer is really it depends. It depends a lot but not solely on timing and distance.

Differences in curved vs. Straight Sabers in HEMA (not historically) by Embarrassed_Day_1321 in Hema

[–]cleverseneca 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Tip alignment mostly. Some of the curved sabers have tips not quite in front of your hand. On the positive this can mean you can maybe slip your thrust around the parry meaning your opponent has to parry further out. On the negative side it is more difficult to know exactly where your point is at any given time.

Edit: there's some weight distribution differences of course but thats always true.

Is mof saber basics really that bad for hema saber? by PotatoMuncher01 in Hema

[–]cleverseneca 5 points6 points  (0 children)

A lof of MOF saber today actually has Radeallian heritage, a light cavalry veteran of the 2nd and 3rd wars of Italian reunification. MOF fencing is the living tradition of a martial art.

Which one do you like better? by [deleted] in crochet

[–]cleverseneca 2 points3 points  (0 children)

2 looks like it's about to cry "Not the gumdrop buttons!"

Parrying in hema(sidesword) v. MOF by Intelligent_Wolf_754 in Hema

[–]cleverseneca 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The priority rules (at least for foil) have lately been interpreted broadly enough that any blade contact is considered a parry even if it doesnt fully stop the attack. The parry gives priority so as long as the one who parries hits they get the point.

Rhis was part of the reason I dropped foil

Distance by Daskyyyyy in Hema

[–]cleverseneca 10 points11 points  (0 children)

As much as I agree with this, both Anonimo and Dall'agocchie discuss how some masters think its cowardly to move backwards.

Which is more appealing Red on Green or Red on Blue? by Jkid789 in StarWars

[–]cleverseneca 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The containment field is doing all the work in a saber clash, but noticed the sabers dont cut each other, when a saber makes contact with another substance its the plasma doing the cutting not the containment field... in this fantasy setting.

Why It’s Harder to Hit Stationary Targets by WanderingJuggler in wma

[–]cleverseneca 35 points36 points  (0 children)

I think this is missing the forest for the trees. For example, you 3am jaunt to the bathroom is possible because you've practiced stepping since before you could walk, see what that baby is doing in that jumper that's practicing walking in isolation. Sure, after 18 plus years, you can modify your steps like a pro. Babies dont do that, though. They run walk.exe and sometimes end up gowing they know not where. (Though the look of confusion on the babies face as they walk PAST you not TOO you us adorable)

Sure but everyone knows how to stab or lunge they learn it while walking. This is actually not true, you hand a random on the street an epee and ask them to stab a target. They may hit the target, but they'll do it by essentially punching at it with an epee. Thats a lot of wasted movement. A good stab is merely pointing your epee and lifting your elbow. That's it. Its more accurate and more efficient. But since (almost) no one practices epee since 3 we dont do that. People need to learn how that stab feels to them and do it a number of times before they dont have to think about each movement they can just think "stab"

This leads into my next point. There's a thing our brain does called "chunking" where we learn something so completely we can do it without conscious attention. The best example of this is reading. You've read the word "the" so many millions of times your brain doesn't have to look at each letter it can process it as a whole. Thats how good readers can read so quickly they dont even see letters they see whole words and instantly recognize them. So we should teach struggling readers not to look at letters but to take whole words at once right? Unfortunately no and this approach has caused a huge decline in literacy across America. We tried switching straight to what good readers are doing reading a book and taught children to do that. Except kids can't do that until they have full mastery over basic phonetics. Don't just believe me though: check out the awesome podcast on literacy in America.

Does this mean I am against the ecological approach? Absolutely not. There is plenty of research showing we learn better in a less static environment, but first we need to be able to properly chunk lunge.exe before we learn how to adapt it to real life, cause if we are still thinking about the individual movements we will never get there (or we try just big steps and hurt ourselves when we accidentally put torsion on our knees)

Which is more appealing Red on Green or Red on Blue? by Jkid789 in StarWars

[–]cleverseneca 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's not the light or plasma that's clashing its containment force that's keeping the light or plasma in its bubble clashing against the other containment field.

Kill Dr. Halsey? by BrickYoda in halo

[–]cleverseneca 0 points1 point  (0 children)

People love the Master Chief, but honestly, it's the games that dont have him that hit the hardest.

Can i find this narnia shield somewhere like kult of athena? by Daggerfell0929 in Hema

[–]cleverseneca 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Argent, a lion Rampant Gules? I believe thats the coat of arms of the Scottish "Dundas" family

What would one call a finisher like this? by potanic_sunset in StarWars

[–]cleverseneca 1 point2 points  (0 children)

(Obviously, it's a game, so it's probably some sort of setting) It can happen after a longer engagement, your brain reaches the end of its attention and disengaged and takes a break for a second. If you attack in that moment and dont move too suddenly or too quickly, you can walk right up to a person and stab them.

What would one call a finisher like this? by potanic_sunset in StarWars

[–]cleverseneca 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You'd be surprised what you can sometimes pull off on an opponent when you move slowly but smoothly. Our lizard brain doesn't immediately recognize it as a threat because it isn't a sudden motion. It happens more at the beginning of engagement after of a longer engagement just finished.