Poll

stocking or ponies

stocking
25 (27.5%)
ponies
28 (30.8%)
specever
38 (41.8%)

Total Members Voted: 91

Author Topic: I am getting into knitting Stockings.  (Read 5567 times)

the skin and bone of a true man Annoying Oranges all kiddy katanas and claymores

touching it with a blade renders the blade a useless, crooked mess, similar to a tinfoil ball.


do i win
row row

fight the power

what the forget is that
That's something from Gurren Lagann, I think.

what the forget is that
i say the same thing about your silly "power armor" poop
wait what about stocking
what was this thread about

get that megaman/weaboo/gundam/whatever stuff out of here

get that megaman/weaboo/gundam/whatever stuff out of here

heresy



don't you mean hypocrite

I don't really see how that's hypocritical.

the skin and bone of a true man Annoying Oranges all kiddy katanas and claymores

touching it with a blade renders the blade a useless, crooked mess, similar to a tinfoil ball.
row row

fight the power

My friend convinced me to use some synching website to watch that at 3:00 am, and I thought it went

Whoa, Whoa!

White power!

Anyway, you know what beats knights in armor?
a war hammer

Suddenly, a topic about knights with silly Warhammer 40k in it.

Anyway, you know what beats knights in armor?


Carbon Steel, which was developed later, was much lighter and more durable. It allowed knights to fight on foot while proving full protection from crossbows AND firearms. In the final decades when plate armor was commonplace, armor smiths would fire a pistol into the chest of their finished suit. If it left a dent without penetrating the steel, it was evidence that the armor was bulletproof, and only then could it be sold.

The Japanese never developed armor that provided adequate protection against plain old bow n arrows.

Then they happen to get shot in that exact same spot loel.


Carbon Steel, which was developed later, was much lighter and more durable. It allowed knights to fight on foot while proving full protection from crossbows AND firearms. In the final decades when plate armor was commonplace, armor smiths would fire a pistol into the chest of their finished suit. If it left a dent without penetrating the steel, it was evidence that the armor was bulletproof, and only then could it be sold.

The Japanese never developed armor that provided adequate protection against plain old bow n arrows.
which is why you frantically beat the knight with a blunt object in hopes of giving him a concussion

which is why you frantically beat the knight with a blunt object in hopes of giving him a concussion

Well no, landing a significantly damaging blow with a warhammer to the head is extremely difficult. The swing of a warhammer is too broad, and another warrior with a shield could easily deflect the blow over his head, and that would leave his attacker open to any kind of close-range weapon. A morning star, however, was much more effective because it could be used with one hand, and could deliver blows with the same inertia with a much shorter swing, much more quickly.

And even then, a blow the limbs was the most effective, because with enough force you could deform their armor and break their bones.


I made the mistake of assuming this thread would be about knitting stockings. I'm very disappointed. 0/10, would not read again.