Fantasy Warfare (Why Warriors Don't Use Clubs) | Worldbuilding

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Worldbuilding Corner

Worldbuilding Corner

Жыл бұрын

Episode 27: Militaries and Armies
In this video we discuss worldbuilding militaries, the different forces that are established within societies, and why warriors with clubs never actually went to war.
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Пікірлер: 482
@arthurdowney2846
@arthurdowney2846 Жыл бұрын
Clubs have been used in warfare from prehistory to the world wars. They are still being used by modern soldiers on the border of India and China. There likely has not been a whole army armed with clubs, but they have always held a place in the toolkit of human violence.
@jfm.d5180
@jfm.d5180 Жыл бұрын
Spears.
@whiteeye3453
@whiteeye3453 Жыл бұрын
Swords
@realstevetyler
@realstevetyler Жыл бұрын
Spears.
@sidney7648
@sidney7648 Жыл бұрын
@@realstevetyler maces
@arcticpossi_schw1siantuntija42
@arcticpossi_schw1siantuntija42 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, in case of emergency, anything will be used for clubbing sword hilts, rifle butts, any piece of something close enough at the moment, pretty much any dull, handheld thing doubles as a club
@scootersachs9999
@scootersachs9999 Жыл бұрын
Matthew: warriors with clubs never actually went to war Tetsubo, maces, and Iroquois ball-club wielders: are we a joke to you? Meanwhile Shadiversity: Get me my big stick. Still a great video nonetheless btw. Keep up the good work!
@joeis18
@joeis18 Жыл бұрын
Kanabo, warhammer, halberd (some had hammers). Clubs and spears are the two weapons that never go out of style of account of one not caring about armor and the other being very long. Swords have no place. We could have very easily reached the 21st century without ever making a long expensive and less useful knife.
@comet.x
@comet.x Жыл бұрын
​@@joeis18 swords do have a reason to exist. you can strike anywhere along the blade and still stab with it. if they were truly useless, the 'arming sword' and any other non ceremonial swords would have never been used
@smergthedargon8974
@smergthedargon8974 Жыл бұрын
@@joeis18 I'd say it's more spears and "bludgeoning weapons" that never go out of style - maces and warhammers are a whole lot more useful against heavy armor than "big club".
@Bruh-jz1se
@Bruh-jz1se Жыл бұрын
@@comet.x that and it like a personal defense weapons when you traveling around the city
@hoosieryank6731
@hoosieryank6731 Жыл бұрын
@@joeis18 Tell that to a cavalryman. Lances are only okay until your target gets past the point.
@colonelhammerhead3025
@colonelhammerhead3025 Жыл бұрын
The matter of army size is different back then than how they are now. While yes a general would lead an army the matter of size is dependent on the way the state, technology, beuracry, and population. Corps were introduced during the napolenic wars since these would act as a smaller and more cohesive unit than a larger army and would carry far more ground. However the the largest standing army during the classical period before the Roman's were the persians with over a 100,000 soldiers. And the Roman's would grow an even larger army where it was over 150,000 soldiers. Keep in mind these empires were over millions of people under their domain. But when these Empire's fell armies during the middle period were only a few thousand or less.
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Definitely, I simply used modern army structures as an example most would be familiar with. Another limiting factor of army size is logistics. In modern times, we have near instant communication, though historically that certainly was not the case, and managing large numbers with delay was impractical and in some cases detrimental.
@TheAchilles26
@TheAchilles26 Жыл бұрын
​@Worldbuilding Corner fantasy settings lead to some interesting differences in logistics even at pre industrial tech levels
@GrimReaper-qp6fv
@GrimReaper-qp6fv Жыл бұрын
@@WorldbuildingCorner Well even back then they still had sophisticated communication and logistics. Look at the Mongol Empire for example, their messages could communicate forces hundreds of kilometres from each other yet still achieve resounding successes.
@jjhh320
@jjhh320 Жыл бұрын
@@GrimReaper-qp6fv yeah their ability to right click and kite enemy troops was unparalleled
@kv4648
@kv4648 11 ай бұрын
What about the Chinese?
@minutemansam1214
@minutemansam1214 Жыл бұрын
Considering the first known instance of warfare included blunt force trauma, I'm going to go out on a limb and say that the earliest warriors who waged war would have used clubs. It may not have been preferred over bows, but logic dictates that one would need some kind of close up weapon in case an enemy got close enough to render a bow ineffective. I would also say the earliest wars were over land control instead of strictly over control of resources as we don't really see much evidence for warfare until after the advent of agriculture, when people started settling into permanent dwellings.
@InquisitorThomas
@InquisitorThomas Жыл бұрын
Also it depended on the society’s access to metallurgy and how dense their native trees were, Polynesian had ornately crafted warclubs made from extremely dense hardwood.
@connormcgee4711
@connormcgee4711 Жыл бұрын
​@@InquisitorThomasIndeed, the Iroquois had something similar as well. Metallurgy seems to disproportionately aid bladed weapons over blunt force weapons, at least from these examples
@raider363
@raider363 Жыл бұрын
​@@connormcgee4711 well yeah it doesn't particularly matter if your club is harder or not. It's going to crush things pretty much the same amount. It's damage is based on its weight. Blades on the other hand need to be made of a strong material or they'll snap too easily and not cause any real damage. Thus metal is more important for a blade than a club.
@connormcgee4711
@connormcgee4711 Жыл бұрын
@@raider363 Ah that makes a lot of sense! Does the shape of clubs have an impact though? This is sort of unrelated, just curious.
@chucklefuck
@chucklefuck Жыл бұрын
Spear
@CCartman69
@CCartman69 Жыл бұрын
Oh you've made Yeerks that pilot dragons. That is both awesome and truly terrifying.
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
That's the Na'qwuil design philosophy haha
@JMObyx
@JMObyx Жыл бұрын
You want to make Yeerks even more terrifying? Make them incapable of ageing, and when they run out of Kandrona they enter a torpor that lasts until they get more, and they could wait millennia if they need to and nobody would ever realize they're not dead until they wake up.
@ShandoGuardian
@ShandoGuardian Жыл бұрын
This is shaping up to be an incredibly interesting and unique world. Good work sir.
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Glad it is as interesting to others as it is interesting to me as I make it 🙂
@ZearthGJL
@ZearthGJL Жыл бұрын
I've been working on my story, Descent, for a while and had my own ideas on how the military functions across different states. Glad to see you touch on the subject! Edit: Just for some light worldbuilding talk, in Descent, there are Elementalists (think Avatar, but with more rules) that ended up carving an empire on the continent. Ironically, because of the fear mongering against them, Guns and other ranged weapon development were made to combat them, hence causing many Elementalist to be subdued, enslaved, or otherwise killed outright in their already small numbers. One nation, Navine, the birthplace of the firearms, use Elementalists as a sort of tactical setting. Enslaved, these Elementalist would serve as shock troopers, while the regular force would act as blocking units, normal troops, and anti Elementalist troopers, where need be. In another nation, Veia, the Elementalist are free and would often be used as force multiplier, while the military as a whole would emphasise on a mobile force to force their opponents to exhaust themselves and fight in planned counter attacks. It's a fun little military worldbuilding exercise when you throw magic into the mix.
@joshred1571
@joshred1571 Жыл бұрын
I think those are really cool ideas! Just one question. How in the setting did the invention of advanced tactics take place? It took hundreds of years of basically hoping your lucky today before we start to see more advanced tactics that we see to do become the norm and not the acceptation. These are at least ww1 era tactics so I was wondering if you had thought of an idea on why military tactics advanced so quickly with the addition of these elemantalists?
@ZearthGJL
@ZearthGJL Жыл бұрын
@@joshred1571 Indeed! What was shown was the olden military tactics (since I didn't really know my watermark on revealing stuff...) The Elementalist may seem like a "be all end all," a weapon to surpass metal gear. But the true reality on the ground is that a bullet doesn't discriminate. Hence, different nations went to lengths to find ways to improve and protect their latent pool of "weapons," so that they might tip the scales of war. While Navine is the first to create the weapon that would be the bane of the Elementalist, and would employ them greatly, Veia was the first to understand that the tactical value of the Elementalist is no longer relevant in war. To that end, they no longer rely on Elementalist centric platoons and would instead put priority on weapons on war that we're more used to seeing today. (At least, irl.) This shift means that now, instead of intentionally having squads work in tandem with their attached Elementalist, troopers are expected to be able to dispatch their mission with or without other means of support provided to them, although many wished that they'd at least not see any Elementalist barreling at them on the opposing side.
@ZearthGJL
@ZearthGJL Жыл бұрын
Also as a side note, "Magi-tech" isn't a thing.*
@joshred1571
@joshred1571 Жыл бұрын
@@ZearthGJL neat. Using the elementalists as more like living artillery pieces does make sense. I think they would be highly prized because the hardest part of using anti-tank and artillery guns has always been maneuvering them. That’s not an issue with them although they can’t be everywhere, they can certainly cover more ground and be more maneuverable. I like this idea. If you get more progress and publish it, please let me know through this comment because i find this to be an interesting idea if it can be written well.
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
That's a really cool setting! It is truly fascinating how much magic affects warfare (and the world in general). A lot of what we know of warfare needs to be adjusted to make way for it, especially in settings with particularly powerful mages. Sounds like you've got some really cool implementations of this!
@sfbastion
@sfbastion Жыл бұрын
Hey, i didn't think you could make the Na'aquil more terrifying but for some reason i forgot about the nonsapient species you made that they could dominate. Fun! Super smart organic mechapilot creatures! Love this world and this process. I'm going to have to try this on my own!
@jadenlingerfelt7585
@jadenlingerfelt7585 Жыл бұрын
This is really cool. For some D&D material, 3.5 Complete Warrior has a section dedicated to how magic can fundamentally change warfare.
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
It's such an interesting concept, and warfare in general is far more in depth than I can cover in ~20 mins, let alone how magic can affect it, but in the future I might specifically discuss magical warfare!
@daniel_rossy_explica
@daniel_rossy_explica Жыл бұрын
I D&D wizards and sorceress are basically artillery. You don't need a cannon if your mage can cast Fireball over and over.
@kalebb1226
@kalebb1226 Жыл бұрын
​@@daniel_rossy_explica and if your enemy is using a cannon cast heat metal
@Astraldragon0
@Astraldragon0 Жыл бұрын
@@daniel_rossy_explica Wand of Fireballs > Cannon
@Spiceodog
@Spiceodog Жыл бұрын
Shadiversity also did a nice video on using magic on the battle feild
@richardgravatt4878
@richardgravatt4878 Жыл бұрын
Or perhaps they did. In 272AD the mid Roman Emperor Aurelian is reported to have employed 'Palestinian Clubmen' at the battle of Emesa, armed with large wooden clubs to defeat Palmyran Cataphracts (lancer cavalry with both horse and man fully armoured , so difficult to attack with light weapons - concussive damage is a thing) Its not clear if these were Auxiliaries recruited from the province of Palestina or legionaries from the local garrison. Some sources credit Constantine the Great for the same trick at the Milvian Bridge in 312AD. Earlier Trajan's column depicts German Symmachiarii (Auxiliary troops trained by the Romans and led by Roman Officers but fighting in their native style) wielding wooden clubs (and spears) in battle against the Dacians. Anglo-Saxon 'Great Fyrd (the rough equivalent role to AWI Minutemen from 1776) called up for the battle of Hastings in 1066 are described as armed with spears, javelins, bows, wooden clubs (apparently sometimes thrown!) and stones (for throwing) plus seaxes (single edged long knives/short swords). Bishop Odo of Bayeux (William the Conqueror's half brother) is depicted on the Bayeux Tapestry wielding a huge wooden club during the battle (as a priest he was forbidden to spill blood...) At the late c19th battles of Isandlwana and Rorke's Drift, soldiers of the Zulu armies, organised into regular, disciplined and officered regiments, as part of a highly stratified military state, used knobkerries (round headed wooden clubs) as back-up weapons. All these examples are of major state organised military forces taking part in major set piece battles. So warriors did use wooden clubs in 'battle', even allowing for your definition , sometimes by choice to achieve a particular effect, sometimes because it was part of their military culture and sometimes because it was what they had - you fight with the army you have, not the one you want. This said, still enjoyed the world building! Seeing one of the elite bear warriors being targeted in mid rampage by a co-ordinated attack from a specially trained 'kill team' of enemy soldiers wielding large wooden clubs might be amusing (though i leave it for you to decide for whom!)
@mrwizardalien
@mrwizardalien Жыл бұрын
I'm finally caught up! can't wait to watch the rest of this series as it comes out
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Glad you are enjoying the content! 😊
@michaelkennell2420
@michaelkennell2420 Жыл бұрын
Your mindflayer equivalents are truly terrifying, especially when they start subjugating the strongest warriors from other sapient races too
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
I can imagine a cinematic moment where a hero has to encounter their old partner or mentor, piloted by a Na'qwuil.
@mikael6743
@mikael6743 Жыл бұрын
I love this series! Every episode is brief but contains most important information of the respected topic. In addition everything is well summarised and each episode feels well thought through! Really exellent job!
@Mikeykneeled
@Mikeykneeled Жыл бұрын
ive had a fantasy world brewing in my mind for over 10 years that i have never had the discipline to put into writing - finally making more headway than i ever have before - I'm amazed at how little thought I've put into the military, the plot points are mostly interpersonal, but the militaries will shape the settings around them - very cool thank you
@mrtiny5029
@mrtiny5029 Жыл бұрын
This series and as a whole your channel is heavily underrated. Thanks for the interesting & helpful vids.
@emblem3272
@emblem3272 Жыл бұрын
Found your channel on Saturday, and have now fully binged the entire thing. It's a bit weird having to actually "join you next time" instead of continuing right away, but I guess that just gives me time to start worldbuilding!
@ianm5782
@ianm5782 Жыл бұрын
This series has been amazing and very interesting, Can't wait for the rest of them. I've pretty much watched everything up to this point back to back.
@Rei_geDo
@Rei_geDo Жыл бұрын
Congratulations on the channel's growth! The content you present is incredible and you really deserve it.
@immortaljanus
@immortaljanus Жыл бұрын
I recently starting writing a series of novels about a people that go to war against a branch of their own that were ostracized ages ago. Since they are predominantly hunter/gatherers, I try to make them develop military order out of their hunting groups. A platoon is a group of four, three hunters plus a leader (since they only have four fingers on their limbs, this equals three fingers and a thumb, hence the platoon is called a 'palm').
@tedarcher9120
@tedarcher9120 Жыл бұрын
What is interesting is that prehistoric archery battles were not at all like medieval ones. Usually arrows lacked fletchings and were quite light, with archers engaging without any structure at max ranges, and after a couple were wounded one side fled the field, with the other taking their territory and women, if they could catch them. It is depicted well in "The white headhunter"
@rmt3589
@rmt3589 Жыл бұрын
2:27 You have already saved me so much work! Video is 10/10, and everything else is extra credit.
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Glad to have been of such quick help!
@josevelazquez5721
@josevelazquez5721 Жыл бұрын
I am super excited to have found this channel! World building is my favorite aspect of any location and world. Anything from fantasy to real life, I can’t tell you the amount of times I’ve paused a video and just thought of the world at the time.
@horacestorm13
@horacestorm13 Жыл бұрын
I'm also planning on writing a novel series about a guy building his own dukedom in another world, so this came in pretty handy. Thanks for the vid, chief. Loving every valuable information it gave me to prepare for my writings 😁
@thesevendeadlysins578
@thesevendeadlysins578 Жыл бұрын
That sounds fun and interesting. I love the idea.
@horacestorm13
@horacestorm13 Жыл бұрын
@@thesevendeadlysins578 Thanks 😄
@DrunkManSquakin666
@DrunkManSquakin666 Жыл бұрын
"Warriors with clubs never went to war." Not entirely true. Even by the strictest definition of a military, Japanese samurai used the tetsubo on occasion as an anti-armor weapon. It wasn't a common tool, but it was used to some capacity. That said, a "modern" club that is optimized for the job would probably have its place on the battlefield in a fantasy setting, depending on several factors. It's more likely to see the light of day in a low magic setting where there's plate armor specifically. Or perhaps there's pegasus knights? Logically, the wings would be a large target and having a weapon with a large striking area would be quite devastating in that context. Food for thought.
@noahvcat9855
@noahvcat9855 Жыл бұрын
Another thing to always keep in mind that many militaries are constantly adapting and changing, as it is sometimes a misconception for war to never change when really war is something that always evolves such as for example a early 18th century army is gonna be drastically different in terms of outward aesthetics and way of fighting from a late 18th century army and that many militaries could evolve many times over the course of a single war so to keep your military interesting is to probably note the change it has done to itself over the course of its existence, Rome as a civilization technically existed for over 2000 years from its founding of its first kings to the fall of Constantinople by the ottomans in what we could call the Byzantine empire and in this very very long time frame, rome's military force had to change and adapt many times in order to remain viable and relavent.
@stephena1196
@stephena1196 11 ай бұрын
I recently saw a video (re. the comparison of modern day trenches in Ukraine with those of the Western Front in WWI) which stated both sides on the Western Front continuously evolved and that either side would have made the breakthrough they both wanted, if they were faced by the army of a year earlier.
@geswut3144
@geswut3144 Жыл бұрын
Yoooo I just caught up with this series yesterday and was so sad I had to wait. Thanks!
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Good timing! Hope you are enjoying the series ☺️
@QueenAleenaFan
@QueenAleenaFan Жыл бұрын
It's nice to see some of your examples.
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Glad to hear they are enjoyable! I am enjoying putting them together across this series :)
@4thopinion792
@4thopinion792 Жыл бұрын
Listening to the breakdown at the end with all the different cultures was very fascinating, well done!
@danielkover7157
@danielkover7157 Жыл бұрын
Matthew, I've watched this entire series thus far, and I've enjoyed it. I really hope you're considering writing novels with the world of Locus. I find the concepts fascinating, but seeing them put to use in a story setting would be marvelous! 😊
@heavymetalelf
@heavymetalelf Жыл бұрын
Hi! I just stumbled on this video and it's the first one I've seen from you. I liked it so much I decided to subscribe. I'm looking forward to more 👍
@PrivateJohnson42
@PrivateJohnson42 Жыл бұрын
Always love watching your vids, they've helped me realize that science-based worldbuilding is what I need to do in order to break this six month writer's block. I followed a ton of advice before about things being smoke and mirrors and how the art is in making worlds that people believe are fully fleshed out but is really just what is needed to be fleshed out for a plot. Turns out that doesn't work for me and I need actual hard info to pull from when I need it. Thanks so much, man.
@benjifiji2019
@benjifiji2019 Жыл бұрын
keep it up dude! love your work
@pinkiechan5758
@pinkiechan5758 Жыл бұрын
Really love this video series. Kind of wish there is more. I know you’re probably gonna upload one in a couple of days considering the previous upload schedule. Can’t wait to see it.
@gamezx
@gamezx Жыл бұрын
I've been trying to build a world and a story for a while now, so watching through these videos has been interesting, lots of notes to take. Still trying to find a good way to pull the story together through the world though =P Some ideas for future videos could be how to design kingdoms or cities, what would be the essentials a settlement would need and is there logic or a system to how a good fantasy city would be laid out Or even more than that, maybe try to put together a list of settlement types that would usually spring up other than the main kingdoms. Like smaller villages, ports and harbors, farmland or various types of outposts, and break down the logic or reasoning on where they would most likely be placed Also maybe a video giving a few tips or tricks for how to create fantasy names. I just can never understand how a person comes up with cool sounding new names for people, places or things. Whenever i try to come up with something it feels like i'm just doing random sounds until something comes through, whereas other works seem to have elaborate names which sound legit
@smileybutt6455
@smileybutt6455 Жыл бұрын
I can give you a little tip for fantasy names, which helped me! Write down a bunch of natural things, like river, hill, tree, mountain, and make up a name for them that sounds like it could be called if you discovered those things (e.g. River = Flume, Hill = Bulge) Then, mix the word up a little to give it a fantasy kick (e.g. Flume = Flusè, Bulge = Bulega) Then, when making a place name, use this new language to name it, or what you think the creator/ discoverer of this place would name it (e.g. town at the top of hill with a river flowing down it? Welcome to Bulèse!) Bit quick and dirty, but can tie every place using the same language (or a language that isn't used anymore) together! That's pretty much where most of the real life names of places come from (e.g. Torpenhow Hill, coming from several different languages and translates to "Hill Hill Hill Hill") Hope this helps!
@swordsnspearguy5945
@swordsnspearguy5945 Жыл бұрын
i think my great great grandfather would disagree about warriors not using clubs he used one extensively at Ypres
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Clubs were certainly used, though an important distinction, especially for conflicts as recently as Ypres is that warfare very certainly was not entered into with the assumption that most soldiers would be using wooden clubs as their primary weapons.
@joeis18
@joeis18 Жыл бұрын
​@@WorldbuildingCorner No, but the club is still one of the few weapons that modern soldiers will train on. In fact, it's more common than the bayonet, and only surpassed by the knife. EVERYONE in EVERY conflict throughout human history was expected to know how to use a club. You can't argue against this.
@williamwelford5592
@williamwelford5592 Жыл бұрын
I just want to let you know as a fellow worldbuilder your videos have been so helpful.
@Lilas.Duveteux
@Lilas.Duveteux Жыл бұрын
Wonderful video as always. For my personal verse, in the current time line there is for the humans of the continent on which the story is set a mostly feudal armed force, with some local peasants sometimes being conscripted and trained when greater numbers are needed. The Pyroxene Drows do not have a military, since they are a city-state hidden from the outside world. The closest thing they have are guards, that serve as a police force, and make sure nobody reveals to other cultures their existance. The Emerald Drows on the other hand have a reserve-type of military, with every male being a soldier. They are not as organized, though, and their function is mostly to raid, and keep their main location secret. In Drow cultures, enemies and criminals who earned themselves the death penalty are either consumed, dissected or turned into soap. As Drow view decomposition as sacred, saponification is reserved for the most hated, the one to who they see no honor and are beyond redemption. The stateless Ice Elves have warrior mages, adult males of their society who are physically strong and magically gifted. They are the closest thing this world in the XVIth century (equivalent to our XVIth century) have to an air force, since Ice Elves are capable of flight. However, they cannot stay airborne for very long, and three hours is the maximum most can take. Magic and archery are performed at ground level. Since magic require transe to perform, these warrior mages would be a lot less responsive to terror tactics. Also, their particular style of magic are "psychic blades", which do not pierce the skin, but causes severe pain and potentially lethal internal damage, as well as confusion and hallucinations. The bonus of this is that they can never run out of ammunitions. The minus, it requires a lot of time and effort to maintain. There are also catpeople, who don't really have any state of their own either. They form small villages, in which virgins are the fighters. In their territorial rage, they can take down opponents that are physically stronger and better armed then themselves, but are quite vulnerable in a calmer state. Dwarves strongly value peace , and they tend to avoid conflicts when they can, excepted when competing for ressources. They mostly work through reserves. Also, there is the occasional human Dark Lord, and during the course of History, one of this Dark Lord and his army of the undead formed an independent, multicultural country out of the old necropolises.
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Fascinating, as always. I absolutely love the concept of psychic blades, it is so mysterious and otherworldly, but the combat style of them being familiar. Very cool!
@ashina2146
@ashina2146 Жыл бұрын
Reminder that there's many types of army organization other than the Irregular and Professional Militaries. Retinue Organization is one of the most common for Tribal society where a High Chief would have Lower Chief becoming his retinue and having Retainers of his own, when called for war the Lower Chief would gather up men which could be levied peasant or their own retainers, the Retainers are usually chosen close people in the tribe who has been given the wealth and spend more time training. Example of this Army Organization are the Classical Barbarians, Medieval Kings with their Knights and to a certain Extend the Samurai of Sengoku Jidai.
@TheAchilles26
@TheAchilles26 Жыл бұрын
By the definition given in the video, Retinue Organization is Irregular, Medieval levies were even specifically mentioned
@ashina2146
@ashina2146 11 ай бұрын
@@TheAchilles26 It still depend on the Context, as Retinues are often Professional to Semi-Professional Soldiers when serving people of high status, in many Medieval European Society the Term "Man-at-Arms" are given to soldiers who fight while serving a lord who paid them for their service and even housed their family in the lord's lands. In a Modern Context the Retinue Organization is almost non-existent as the military equipment getting more state owned as you cannot just own a Tank in your house where you would ride into battle once your Governor calls for war like a Medieval Man-at-Arms owning a War Horse.
@0rcblorg
@0rcblorg Жыл бұрын
I'm happy and sad to reach the last of this 27 videos playlist I really can't wait to see what's next also the more I see your video the more I'm willing to finally start working on my own world so keep going with amazing content, i'm no expert but you're definitely becoming a reference in world building (also I strongly believe that your videos could be used as a pedagogic support as a lot of the material you use and put in your videos are things that are teach in school (at least in France where I'm from) and they could definitely use world building as a tool to explain these subjects to children it would make it way more interesting)
@MacroAggressor
@MacroAggressor 7 ай бұрын
Your concept for the Tarna'qua is fascinating... I shrugged it off as a reskin of the Mind Flayer, but your idea would play out _sooo_ much more interestingly. Love it. Stealing it. Thx.
@dogf421
@dogf421 Жыл бұрын
fun thing about prehistoric warfare: there were developments in ranged weaponry even before the bow. weapons like the sling and atlatl are so often slept on, but david kills goliath with a sling in the bible for a reason. the sling was the glock of its age.
@kosmaukaszczyk8401
@kosmaukaszczyk8401 4 ай бұрын
but remember not the type of sling you can buy in toy shop
@alshabib5849
@alshabib5849 Жыл бұрын
"Patrol" is a type of mission or action, not a unit designation or size. you were probably confusing it for the actual size of "Squad" with what you labeled squad which is usually called a fire team (or simply a team. Your teams are usually sub sections of a squad with one team being led by the sergeant proper and the other being led by a corporal, the distinction between the teams allows the squad to move as two manouver elements and perform flanking manouvers, L shape ambushes, ect. For commonwealth countries "Squad" is usually reffered to as a Section instead
@storytellingchampion6438
@storytellingchampion6438 Жыл бұрын
Nice another video from my new favorite worldbuilding guy
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Thank you for that status! ☺️
@Marceau.
@Marceau. Жыл бұрын
I hope you upload versions of these videos without music at some point! love this series nonetheless
@SomeRandomGuy1098
@SomeRandomGuy1098 11 ай бұрын
I already know about most of the civics stuff in these videos but your worldbuilding is so neat and thought-provoking
@brettpalmer1770
@brettpalmer1770 Жыл бұрын
Just found this channel, looking forward to this content.
@tonyb9290
@tonyb9290 Жыл бұрын
A pleasant listen
@stephena1196
@stephena1196 Жыл бұрын
In the Tollense Valley archeologist have found the site of a battle from c.1250BC. From the part excavated they estimate it involved c.750-1,500 people. They found arrowheads of flint and bronze, bronze spearheads and they also wooden clubs. In WWI soldiers used wooden cubs in trench raids, called trench raiding clubs. I don't understand how you can say warriors never used wooden clubs.
@Goblinhandler
@Goblinhandler Жыл бұрын
He could’ve said better “No well armed warrior uses a club” A club is a makeshift weapon, if they want a bludgeoning weapon to use against armor they use a hammer or mace, not a club
@stephena1196
@stephena1196 11 ай бұрын
@@Goblinhandler He would have said better, if he hadn't said it at all. A club isn't necessarily a makeshift weapon: there is nothing of a temporary substitute nature about knobkerrie, gunstock club, wahaika, etc. it's a long list.
@stephena1196
@stephena1196 11 ай бұрын
@@Goblinhandler what was said is demonstrably untrue and your attempt to explain away his ignorance, as an inability to express himself is bizarre.
@Goblinhandler
@Goblinhandler 11 ай бұрын
@@stephena1196 okay bucko you can quit it with the smug attitude because you read one too many Wikipedia articles No professional army for the last thousand years has used clubs unless desperate
@Axiie
@Axiie Жыл бұрын
I'm already looking forward to the things you're gonna cover on the Na'quil domestication video...
@Skeithalot
@Skeithalot Жыл бұрын
Great content.
@JamesWillmus
@JamesWillmus Жыл бұрын
Got a suggestion for a future video. Talk about the world-building logistics of having a professional Navy. You're fictional world has several populations located on island archipelagos, which makes it likely that they would depend more on a Navy than an army.
@joeis18
@joeis18 Жыл бұрын
Drachinifel is the man you're looking for. Also, check out Perun.
@patrickterryjr4764
@patrickterryjr4764 2 ай бұрын
The Na’qwuil are definitely my favorites. Octopi are super cool and I really like their military style.
@TTMS-Khaz-kun
@TTMS-Khaz-kun Жыл бұрын
Where did you get the numbers ( and by extention the unit names ) from? I tried looking for such info for ranks beyond Generals, but found nothing on the amount of troops undet them nor the name of the unit they would command. Awesome and helpful video though! I will be putting this info to use
@alphastronghold715
@alphastronghold715 Жыл бұрын
Being as the primary weapon of the Aztecs were clubs, spears, and atlatls, yes. Soldiers prior to the advent of bronze used clubs for warfare. The maquahuitl is literally just a primitive mace using obsidian blades instead of steel. That was the main armament for their military elite.
@KapethiaMonan
@KapethiaMonan 2 ай бұрын
It's funny you mentioned the clubs thing. Before I went on an anthropology obsession, I had worked at an axe throwing place for a few years. Over time I improved a lot (I quite literally "studied the axe") and the idea of how I'd use these things in combat was something I entertained. For one, I would never actually throw my axe save for very rare contexts where it'd be useful, and I felt as though I wouldn't use the blade a whole lot. The axes we used had a weighted block side opposite of the blade and I always felt as though that would not only inflict necessary damage to a skull but prevent it from getting stuck. Which while morbid, axe blades get stuck in hard material very easy and requires more energy to pull out from than just clubbing your target. I feel the blade would be useful for chopping the hell out of a shield though.
@josephperez2004
@josephperez2004 11 ай бұрын
Dang, Im going to need to go through this whole series. Have had an idea for a world with several different powers often across species lines (Dragons/humans/orcs/crossbreeds between the three as one group, goblinoids as another, elves/fey as another, undead/crossbreeds with parentage from different factions as a sort of outcast alliance, etc) and really interested in how to bring things together with a sense of realism
@tysonbax6230
@tysonbax6230 Жыл бұрын
Hey new subscriber, I watched your backlog of videos in a couple of days and this video shortly after it came out and love the world and magic system you're crafting but I'm just wondering do you have a upload schedule or just whenever the video is finished? Thanks from a fellow aussie
@Captain23rdGaming
@Captain23rdGaming Жыл бұрын
im glad this video exists, im currently am working a manga that is based around militaries (designs are around 20th century ww1), magic, religion,and cult. It starts off like a normal fantasy but after foundation of resources the world starts industrializing and eventually starts modernizing.
@brunobarreto6017
@brunobarreto6017 Жыл бұрын
Question: where do i find the scientific books and articles basing each Episode? I do not find them in your site.
@seanpoore2428
@seanpoore2428 Жыл бұрын
The comments got it covered but just to add my voice to the uproar: clubs were widely used for a variety of reasons. Videos still good despite that, gonna watch more of your stuff
@janbaer3241
@janbaer3241 Жыл бұрын
There were stone maces used in battles. A ring shaped stone that is shoved towards the end of a tapering rod.
@antonslavik9597
@antonslavik9597 8 ай бұрын
Very nice.
@DeltaCain13
@DeltaCain13 Жыл бұрын
Honestly this video didn’t really go into much detail on why the warriors in your world don’t carry clubs.
@icdong5031
@icdong5031 Жыл бұрын
I think that it helps to define a military in at least two ways. The first is what the military does. There are roughly four military functions. The first is the professional army whose primary purpose is to defeat the external enemies of a nation (see US Army for example). The second is the police army, whose primary function is the defeat of internal enemies (see the Friekorps of the Weimar Republic). The third is a ceremonial force whose function is primarily symbolic (see the Crossbow Corps of San Marino). The last is political in which the military often determines the political fate of the state (see the Praetorian Guard of the Roman Empire). The second way to define a military is to remember Clausewitz's dictum that wars are fought by people. So, recruitment strategies with their advantages and disadvantages should be considered. The oldest, at roughly the beginning of the species, is the warrior system where a group of individuals fights voluntarily for no direct compensation for a cause, usually for family or ideological reasons. The primary advantage of this system is that it is cheap since such warriors largely equip themselves. Also, leadership rapidly evolves towards effectiveness since individual warriors will choose who they follow. The primary disadvantage is that such forces are inevitably small (either due to the limits of a clan size or due to representing a small percentage of the population) and they cannot afford more expensive weapons. The second group, arising roughly at the same time as agriculture, is conscription. Conscription acts as a tax on time, one which is historically disproportionately paid by the poor. Conscription creates large forces, but those forces are expensive (consider the cost just to feed that high a percentage of your population). Also, bear in mind that the state is arming the poorest and thus potentially most rebellious portion of its population. The third system arose roughly around the time of money and those are mercenaries (hiring outsiders to fight for you). This has the advantage of not requiring a standing force as a mercenary army can be hired and fired as needed. Also, if a mercenary outfit exists, that must mean there is enough fighting for that mercenary group to represent an experienced military group. The disadvantages are first, that the mercenary might rob the paymaster and second, that mercenary leaders tend to caution since their soldiers represent their working capital, a thing not to be risked by businesspeople. The fourth system, the regular, is a volunteer subject or citizen paid by the government to fight, or the way most modern militaries work. The advantage is a long-standing highly-capable force, but often with lower numbers than may be needed in an emergency. The fifth system grew out of early democracies and that is the militia system where military service was a condition of citizenship. The major advantages were numbers and the major disadvantages were cost since this is also just universal conscription. However, since historically citizenship has sometimes been tied to wealth, some militaries simply vanished due to economic stratification reducing citizens to tiny numbers. For instance, Sparta's supply of full Spartiates went from about 8000 to about 300 in the two centuries after the Peloponnesian War simply because wealth became concentrated among fewer and fewer families. The last system is military slavery, most often seen in Islamic countries like Mamelukes and Janissaries. These forces were formidable in their day, but stagnated over time. Whether that would be true of all such forces, I don't know.
@kalleendo7577
@kalleendo7577 Жыл бұрын
Awesome!
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Thank you! :)
@bondzy185
@bondzy185 Жыл бұрын
“My name is Matthew, at least according to my commanding officer” has to be one of the infantry-est lines I have heard in a while
@jackscomics3188
@jackscomics3188 Жыл бұрын
Hoping to see the fashion and architecture of these cultures
@robinporter8481
@robinporter8481 Жыл бұрын
My Sci-Fi started as a short story following one character who's past comes back to haunt her. As I decided to expand on it, the original story becoming part 3, of the series that has at least 5 parts planed now, I had to delve more into space tech, war tech, planetary and galactic governments, to planet seeding. Galactic wise, there are three main powers, a monarchy, a federation, and a confederacy (weakly aligned planets who are independent, usually at war with each other, but, ally for a common defense). Each uses different tech, which makes their strategies vary both in military and politics.
@rexstrikerstill9693
@rexstrikerstill9693 Жыл бұрын
Question about the Na'qwuil - Do they tend to stick to a particular host, or do they regularly transfer? I understand it was mentioned before, that the host, after being dominated, will die if unconnected. Does that mean a Na'qwuil picks a host and stays with it until it wants/needs a new one, or can they rotate through a variety of hosts in their possession?
@adc1222
@adc1222 Жыл бұрын
This is the first of your videos that I've seen, and as soon as I heard that you had squid people mindcontrolling dinosaurs I was like oh shit I need to go watch the rest of this series
@PalleRasmussen
@PalleRasmussen Жыл бұрын
I am going to be the military historian saying; "aaaaachktuallyyyy". Germanic warriors did use clubs against Roman legions. Probably for the same reason later knights used maces. And what is a mace but a club?
@blooperman1997
@blooperman1997 11 ай бұрын
He tried to argue that a club is exclusively made of wood in a comment. This entire video left a sour note in my mouth...
@Bird_Dog00
@Bird_Dog00 Жыл бұрын
I've recently stumbled over your channel and haven't yet had time to watch all your vidoes. Have you already explored the primary food production of the different cultrues at this particular point in time? Depending on circumstances, it can dictate a nation or culture's approach to warfare. if for exampe between 8 and 9 out of 10 adults (definition of "adult": old enough to sire or bear children) need to work in primary food production to feed the population, a standing army of any significant size would be pretty much out of the question. Pesant levies - often in some sort of feudal system - with campaigning seasons being restricted to the time between planting and harvest - and maybe winter - would be pretty much the only possible way to go fight abroad. I would think that ancient civilisations with such a massive food surplus that they can afford large standing armies would be the exception rather than the rule.
@dergartenzwergvonnebenan
@dergartenzwergvonnebenan Жыл бұрын
tangential, but related: Different kinds of food can also affect tactics. E.g. crops can be easily burned down by enemy forces, while potatoes cannot. (if I remember correctly this was one of the reasons why European leaders were so eager to implement potatoes as the new staple food during/after the 30-years-war)
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
"An army fights on it's stomach" is certainly very true. I have not directly covered food beyond looking at yields in each location, which determined where each culture settled (and which ones failed), but that is something I plan on doing in the future!
@Bird_Dog00
@Bird_Dog00 Жыл бұрын
@@WorldbuildingCorner It's not just about the army's supply situation. Rather it's about the nation's ablity to feed itself. In many places historicaly the majority of the common folks were subsistance farmers, producing a limited food surplus to sell on the market. A pesant levy would call the strongest pair of hands away from the farm. And if those hands stay on the battle field - or if the campaign just takes too long, the rest of the family may not be able to bring in the entire harvest before it rots on the field. At best, there will be no surplus generated this year by this farm. At worst, the entrie family starves to death during the winter. In the case of a culture using slave labour, ethical considerations aside, it's a double edged sword. While you may be able to squeeze a larger surplus out of your involuntary labour force, you will have to devote considerable ressources - especialy military assets - to keep your slaves in check. Slavery doesn't allow you to have a standing army, it forces you to have one. Your society will live in constand fear of a widespread slave revolt. And considerable military recources will need to be kept at home at all time, making large and long military campaigns a dangerous gamble. If your army suffers a Cannae or Morat, you will not only find yorself in a tight spot on the battlefield, but also facing more wildfires in the form of slave uprisings than you can possibly put out in time.
@MementoMoriMarksmanship
@MementoMoriMarksmanship Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure what references you're using for your military hierarchical structure example at 9:04. Although the titles are correct for platoon level & above, the "squad" & "patrol" numbers & officer titles are incorrect. Also, "patrol" is not usually used in this way, at least in the U.S. Army Infantry. I would recommend downloading a pdf version of ATP 3-21.8 (Army Technical Publication) Infantry Platoon and Squad. It has basically everything you could want to know about small unit tactics & organizational structure, as it applies to U.S. Army Infantry. Hope this helps.
@marcovchb
@marcovchb Жыл бұрын
What tool did you use to create the maps? They are neat!
@cambuxton6835
@cambuxton6835 Жыл бұрын
In old school Dungeons and Dragons they had clubs. Barbarians were the ones who used them I think. Had the potential to shake the ground up with some clubs, I think. The humble club is not used a lot. But it can have a tremendous effect as a ground shattering weapon when it is used as a magic weapon.
@nekokoishi
@nekokoishi Жыл бұрын
Now that I think about it, even when everyone in my world pretty much has magic. The usage of sharp weapons like swords or ranged weapons like bow and arrows. Would make sense due to how the magic system works where everyone has the same weakness. Which is bleeding or getting wounded. But one of the military in this world of mine uses a special cloth that was discovered in their homeland that can resist cutting. Having an improved and armored version of that cloth and they can overwhelm an opposing army who relies on the bleeding weakness.
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Sounds interesting! This is oversimplified, but we tend to see armor evolving reactively to the weapons used. When slashing weapons reached their peak usage, chain mail and plate were common outfitting, but once firearms were introduced, were quickly replaced.
@nekokoishi
@nekokoishi Жыл бұрын
@@WorldbuildingCorner Tbh I do wanna introduce firearms in this world via a more advanced civilization technologically speaking. But it may take some time to figure out how to world build it and to how such technology hasn't spread on other parts of the world yet.
@kappakiev9672
@kappakiev9672 Жыл бұрын
will you be posting a webpage or a readable source for this world?
@niq362
@niq362 Жыл бұрын
Great video, would you do a politics one regarding worldbuilding?
@Ninjamanhammer
@Ninjamanhammer Жыл бұрын
About army heirarchies, the example you used is very modern, army hierarchies in the middle ages were a lot less well defined and as a result most fantasy armies probably should too. Also it's important to note than standing armies weren't used in medieval Europe. The closest you get is mercenaries and feudal bound knights.
@TheAchilles26
@TheAchilles26 Жыл бұрын
The Eastern Roman Empire still maintained standing armies throughout most of the Medieval Period
@Ninjamanhammer
@Ninjamanhammer Жыл бұрын
@@TheAchilles26 calling Byzantium medieval Europe doesn't seem very accurate.
@TheAchilles26
@TheAchilles26 Жыл бұрын
@Ninjamanhammer you're only saying that because it singlehandedly disproves your absolute
@Ninjamanhammer
@Ninjamanhammer Жыл бұрын
@@TheAchilles26 I'm only saying it because the average fantasy setting is inspired by medieval England/Germany/France/Italy, not the Byzantine Empire.
@TheAchilles26
@TheAchilles26 Жыл бұрын
@Ninjamanhammer the most iconic fantasy setting ever quite flagrantly has an Eastern Roman Empire knockoff
@J4R0D
@J4R0D Жыл бұрын
I fantasy worldbuild based on my old Mega Bloks, and one of the factions uses maces and clubs. Their mold was bad, causing many broken hands. I have used that as a cultural trait that those warriors use heavy clubs but many break their hands doing so. In the unified kingdom, they are restricted from using those weapons, which they see as taking away their culture, causing divides in society.
@jamesadamsfl
@jamesadamsfl Жыл бұрын
The Sahakuth military reminds me of ancient Carthage's military. Which leads to all sorts of possibilities: 1) mercenaries revolting if they can't get paid (as Extra History says: if history has taught us anything, it's "always pay your mercenaries), and 2) I can easily see important military dynasties being developed (similar to the Barca family), who may or may not decide to defy the state in the name of their own glory or other goals. If you don't know what I'm talking about, look up the very first Extra History video about the First Punic War.
@totallynotalpharius2283
@totallynotalpharius2283 Жыл бұрын
Magic users in my fantasy worlds militaries tend to have heavy guards places around them since they’re squishy. They also have a high attrition rate sooo colleges of magic tend to get forcibly conscripted from time to time
@ianyoder2537
@ianyoder2537 Жыл бұрын
I'm gonna need you to define the word "club" for a second and the implications around it. Because maces are just fancy clubs and they were used extensively in war because of their affect against armored targets.
@georgethompson913
@georgethompson913 Жыл бұрын
Stone Mace's were very common in early bronze age societies. Having the same place swords would later have culturally.
@ianyoder2537
@ianyoder2537 Жыл бұрын
@@georgethompson913 Exactly, they were once a highly decorated weapon that was used as a status symbol.
@georgethompson913
@georgethompson913 Жыл бұрын
​@@ianyoder2537 ironically it was the introduction of bronze helmets that led to their replacement by axes. In fact war clubs were used by mesoamerican armies, who despite lacking metal often had melee centric armies.
@missilemassacreonline
@missilemassacreonline Жыл бұрын
I came here just to say that clubs were absolutely used in warfare. Between trench clubs in the first World War, and the various bludgeoning style weapons of countless cultures throughout history, they were used. Blunt force remained a key pillar of warfare for millennia, and remains an option with the truncheons, billy club, and night sticks of law enforcement today. In my setting, a city-state of Orcs born out of the remnants of their fallen nation culturally use blunt weapons only as a form of penance for the time they were slavers, they used those exact same weapons to enslave their enemies, and now use them in respect for the sanctity of life as to not kill. Their fighting style is one of disarmament, incapacitation, or capture. They use bolas, they wrestle, they use blunt force, grappling and fist fighting. They seek to remove the enemy's ability to fight without killing. They know full well that it is a handicap in war, and they accept it as penance in the eyes of their deity that values freedom above all else. Not all Orcs are of this city-state's philosophy however, and some continue to raid, pillage, and enslave. But all incarnations of Orcs are obsessed with their perceptions of freedom. To be Urzick (Orcish) is to be free. For the city-state, to kill is to rob another of their full life. For the varied warbands, to not kill is to rob them of their rights to kill.
@ethan4475
@ethan4475 Жыл бұрын
Yo bro, can you turn this video script into a PDF? I'd buy this off your site. I would buy this whole series if available.
@DavidGlenn
@DavidGlenn Жыл бұрын
This is very interesting. I never considered this when building a fictional army I didn’t really work on building an army because I didn’t want to use a big battle. However, that being said, I did make that my human society does allow men and women to serve. They do teach children how to fight, but they don’t serve. They put an emphasis on being able to fight and protect themselves because throughout their history they have had periods where they had been enslaved by others, and they want to make sure they don’t get conquered again. So knowing how to fight is kind of a necessity. My bird species… I haven’t built one. I imagine they put more emphasis on song, dance, and the arts. That being said, I realize that they wouldn’t (and didn’t) have a perfect history. Conflicts did arise (with both their species and humans). Right now, in my mind, I think due to their size they’d have an Air Force that specializes in outthinking and outmaneuvering their opponents. They’d probably try to turn an opponent’s advantages against them. Oh, that’s interesting. I didn’t realize prehistoric warfare focused more on archery instead of melee. It does make more sense. The parasitic octopi sound like their army might be the most terrifying. I can see them being cast as antagonists in a story
@EJinSkyrim
@EJinSkyrim Жыл бұрын
The Na'qwuil continue to be absolutely mind-crunchingly terrifying. (Which I'm sure they're perfectly fine with.) So it turns out I know very little about warfare! Fun. This makes me question why I decided to write a story set at the end of a war between dinosaur-powered stronghold city-states at some point in the future. Notes: Taken. More learning required. (I must construct additional pylons.)
@childofathena9420
@childofathena9420 Жыл бұрын
I can imagine some of the conquered human settlements remaining as human settlements purely to breed new things for the Na'qwuil to pilot.
@ERBanmech
@ERBanmech Жыл бұрын
In a setting I’m making there is military conflict between 2 factions. The first faction has control over elements similar to controlling a limb which makes them incredibly powerful this also makes their military have rudimentary tactics and fighting skill because why use physical force when you can use elements to break your enemies. The second faction is merely human and has no powers so they have developed infrastructure, technology, and fighting discipline to be able to combat a significantly more powerful enemy. Because the elements faction is dangerous up close the other faction makes heavy use of entrenched positions, ambush, and ranged bombardment to best them.
@ilari90
@ilari90 Жыл бұрын
I think your understanding of prehistoric conflicts is a tad lacking, I recommend Prehistory Guys from youtube. Also clubs from hardwood have been common weapons for warriors in Africa since club was invented ("rungu" is a prime example). Wooden clubs have been found from many prehistorical battle sites, and in for example aztecs also used clubs to get live captives for sacrifices. Arming your men with clubs to get more sacrifices sounds a good worldbuilding aspect too. And this is only about prehistory. Later maces and hammers were the tools of war knights used against other and peasants learned to wield too in Netherlands for example. In a worldbuilding standpoint, some culture might have a winning strategy, until other culture gets some cultural innovation, usually something like city state rivalry can develop warfare a lot in short time. developing strategies to counter enemies,. Thus we can see many kinds of fortifications and field strategies come about.
@PhantasyPen
@PhantasyPen Жыл бұрын
While I enjoyed this video quite a bit, I feel like you basic premise (warfare requires the development of true ranged weaponry like slings and bows) is rather flawed, and ignores many early examples of conflict.
@christianschwietzke8959
@christianschwietzke8959 Жыл бұрын
Indeed. There have always been periods where ranged weapons played, at best, a secondary role in successful military organisation - the Greek hoplite phalanx, Roman legions, late Medieval to early modern pike squares...
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, all of your examples played huge roles in historical warfare. All of these examples however include melee weapons made of metal. In the video I do clarify that once bronze (the first metal we used for weaponry) is introduced, melee foot soldiers start being introduced (and become the norm for much of history).
@josecarlosmoreno9731
@josecarlosmoreno9731 Жыл бұрын
@@WorldbuildingCorner The Americas and Polynesia did not have metal (in any meaningful amount for tool use) yet still had primarily melee weapons. Ranged weapons are not all modern guns, they are easily outmatched in close combat and cannot reliably prevent close combat in a battle which is why most human combat has utilized both ranged and melee together up until modern guns became powerful, reliable, and fast enough. Even in Europe, among the prehistoric battle sites, clubs and stone maces are found as well as spears.
@georgethompson913
@georgethompson913 Жыл бұрын
​@@WorldbuildingCorner Which is why early Egyptian armies used stone Macemen, being supplemented by archers. Or why the Aztecs had a huge focus on melee.
@cm60854
@cm60854 Жыл бұрын
I would love for them to return to the original charaters and see where they are now, but I would be happy to see a completely brand new story in that same univers
@Empressofnight
@Empressofnight Жыл бұрын
A civilization of bird like creatures dwelling on/in cliffs would likely develop an airforce first. This would cause a great advantage (at least at first) against any hostile civilization that never had a need to watch the skys for birds dropping rocks or arrows just some ideas for anyone doing some world building.
@TealWolf26
@TealWolf26 Жыл бұрын
It makes sense on a very pragmatic basis to use ranged over melee. It takes skill, training and maybe a little luck against armored opponents, but it makes hurting the ranged warrior harder. And if the warrior feels more powerful and in less danger, their morale is less likely to suffer. It takes a significant warrior culture to indoctrinate the "bravery and heroism," to charge into danger for life and limb. In wargames I tend to put emphasis on ranged units because it maximizes my KD. I can retreat easier, I get surrounded less often, I can bombard at maximum range and "kite" enemies with less range or that are using melee weapons. An enemy can't be scary if they're dead. I've primarily used melee troops as screening, protection against cavalry and a means to "lock down" my enemy so I can break them from a fixed position. Melee warfare has always seemed to me to require a high honor culture influence to make it stick.
@electroninja8768
@electroninja8768 Жыл бұрын
I was certain that I posted a long-winded comment about the use of clubs in warfare and their relevance to levied or irregular armies here yesterday, but it is gone today. Maybe I am losing it. Are you operating a comment filter bot? Maybe I tripped a flag somehow. But to explain what I meant to yesterday. Poorer or less formal militaries tended to give their levied or drafted soldiers as cheap a weapon as possible, so long as it was still effective. For this reason you can see most large armies throughout history primarily wielding clubs, spears, slings, and thin shields. Examples of widely used war clubs from various points in history: Burda(Celts), Goedendag(Gauls), Kanabō(Japanese), Jade Mere(Pacific Islanders), Shillelagh(Irish), Stone-Capped or gun-stock clubs(Native North America) , Macuahuitl(Native South America). And this list doesn't include maces or ceremonial weapons. It only includes actual clubs that were used en-masse by warriors of their respective cultures.
@justsaying4303
@justsaying4303 Жыл бұрын
or they showed with what they can afford or available
@mattiOTX
@mattiOTX 6 ай бұрын
10 seconds in and ai have a question. What was a war club used for if not for war? They were common in native American tribes from very early. I would also note slings were also big in places where you did not have the resources for archery. That is perhaps even earlier than the bow and was used well throughout history.
@Anatolius1010
@Anatolius1010 Жыл бұрын
Kinda interested in the standing armies of Kathuchusho, Thuchus and Lindale - noting that they're standing armies, how are they generally organised? Are they are single standing army centred around the political centre, like the Kingdom of Macedon or the Fatimid Caliphate? Or are there multiple "Field Armies" like the Eastern and Western Roman Empires or the Sasanian Empire with their Field armies stationed near the capital and around the provinces? Also how does the dynamic between state and the military play in terms of political struggles, and how would it differ between the states of Kathuchusho, Thuchus and Lindale? Especially in a pre-modern society, military offices held extreme amounts of political influence, and they often evolved overtime as the relative importance of the office or the needs of the state changed overtime. I'd imagine in Thuchus, given that the Kathateshi are significant landowners and military officers, they would be an extremely influential military aristocracy that could influence the central power of the state.
@WorldbuildingCorner
@WorldbuildingCorner Жыл бұрын
Kathochusho, as campaigners, would have multiple field armies that are used as much if not more offensively, rather than defensively. Lindale by comparison would have a single standing army centered around the political centre, operating more defensively. In terms of power structure, zithidi would absolutely hold influence over the zho (the absolute monarch), for whom it is in the best interests of the zho to keep the zithidi within their favour, as having them increases their chances of campaigning success, and therefore retaining their title. Lindale comparatively would be far more autocratic, fuelled by religious dogma. Even if an ashborn was more powerful than the Queen, religious precedent gives the monarch authority. Rather than 'placation', greater effort would be placed on propaganda to increase the authority, standing, and appeal of the monarch. Great questions, thank you for asking!
@Anatolius1010
@Anatolius1010 Жыл бұрын
@@WorldbuildingCorner thanks for answering! The world is definitely entering the stage where there's more detail in it and maybe as an idea, it'd be cool to see more in-depth or narrative focus videos on the individual peoples and/or states Just as an aside, the White Shields is an awesome name for your elite warriors, very reminiscent of the Macedonian Argyraspides (silver shields) and Chalkaspides (bronze shields)
@pikaland3852
@pikaland3852 7 ай бұрын
Does a father who hands two of his three weapons to his familly to lead a armed fight against someone like a home invader to force the invader from the house counts as an armed force for the context of a war?
@orange8420
@orange8420 Жыл бұрын
I started a story 2 yrs ago but didn't finished but concept was some story about fantasy world demon and magic and lots of magical creature and people fought them with magic or super power and there's the 1 protag who decide he uses his summons to wage total war against demons, so I watched videos how armies orgainzed
@paulkanja
@paulkanja 7 ай бұрын
Classifying Kalandria's army as reserves felt awkward to me. Balthorpe has historically had negative relations with Kathochusho, which keeps an active standing army that it uses for conquest. Balthorpe and the entire Kathochusho-Kalandria border would have to maintain a far larger standing army to avoid raids and ambushes. The same applies for Sahakuth and Tarna'qwua's west-most state. (That amount of separation should probably have resulted in a: annexation by Kathochusho, or b: a form of independence. They may claim they are still part of Tarna'qua, but their government and constitution is bound to have changed). The only other way Balthrope and the southern border can avoid keeping a huge standing army is to have a sizeable troop of Akrana (or is it Akrani?) stationed at the border or close by. Edit: Sahakuth being a democracy means they are bound to have a standing army especially along their western border. Their citizens cannot be fine with a such power hungry neighbour next door, no matter how friendly and diplomatic the states may be. The Kathochusho would also not be reliable under their model, so are likely to fail. Military members above a certain age could be discharged to both sustain the economy and population. The most exemplary members, however, would remain in the army and gain immense favour from their leader (properties, leadership roles after retirement, etc).
@greyden4704
@greyden4704 Жыл бұрын
Good title, now I'm here
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