man a real katana dont bend like that when hit with a baseball bat a real katana springs back when bended , is very hard to meke it loose the shape, of course u can scratch it bot not band it like that
@SPQQKY no what makes "ZERO" sense is you getting butt hurt about a question, is chopping scrap metal, hitting it with a bat and throwing it on the floor legit tests to show strength!? what about the strength or the user, or the temperature of the metal and all the other variables???...In your eyes cutting a rusty nail proves to you how strong a blade is not even taking into consideration if a Sword-forger saw this they would probably be filled with rage?! that's not disrespectful? gtfo u fanboy
@astralninja1 Ha ha. Shows how little brain you have in your head. Getting bent out of shape about someone testing the strength of a sword. Thinking in some odd way that it shows no respect for the Japanese (when it should be flattering that someone has enough respect for the Japanese sword to try to recreate it). Then flaming like a little school girl. I was hardly "butt hurt", I was asking a simple question to your stupid remark. You had to go an throw poop. Idiot!!!!!!!!!
@astralninja1 BTW, the sword forger is the one that posted this video. Ronin Katana is the manufacturer and Marc is reviewer for the most popular sword forum on the web and doing this on THEIR behalf. And as Marc pointed out, the Japanese did their own destructive testing. So they must have been "dis-respecting" themselves. Go flex your web muscles somewhere else and let the intelligent people have a conversation here.
@SPQQKY lol intelligent...ok mr smarty pants take your youtube victory....why not take a Japanese weapon and mass manufacture it for western people who have a hard-on for sharp things...oh btw Japanese people used to cut dead bodies, bamboo, tree logs and other swords and shields to test out their blades seeing as it took near enough a week to make one not go into their back yard and beat the shit out of it with a brick...but your right I will go flex my "web muscles" somewhere else :)
@astralninja1 You do realize that what the Japanese were trying to achieve so long ago when they made the tamahagane steel is what we now have in modern steel. The Japanese also mass produced swords by machine. Case in point the Gunto. So the Japanese do not have a hard-on for sharp things? Then why to they spend a shit load of money on them? Why do they still have schools? Also, they didn't have steel swing sets back in old Japan to test their swords on, but if they did......
@SPQQKY So your telling me the Japanese mass produced swords in the Edu era? there is a big difference between mass produced swords and hand crafted, forged and engraved blades, From a person who dedicated his life to creating these swords...seeing a western guy beat the shit out of what he holds dear in life is not disrespectful?! I really can't believe you have spend 24 hours arguing this with me...accept it
@astralninja1 Why yes, they did. Not all pieces were presentation pieces. Now, during the Edo Period [Tokugawa Era] (you don't even have a clue on it's spelling, proper term), there was more peace than warfare, so not as many swords were made, but not all soldiers were adorned with beautiful pieces that took months to make. They needed something produced quickly that was effective. Something that could be damaged and not worry about it's cost and how pretty it was.
@astralninja1 In this video I do not see a destructive test on a antique piece from Japan by the likes of such a great artist / smith as Muramasa Sengo, which of course would be an atrocity. I see him beating up a $200 production piece letting us know that it will be perfect for a student of the art to use at their dojo because it's effective and strong and will stand up to their occasional bad form. And it's only been like 8 hours. What have you been doing? Accept the facts
@astralninja1 Hi Astral. The swords being destroyed are scratch and dent swords which had been sitting in the warehouse for some time. Several of them were sent to Torion Sword to do testing on. The point of these videos was to show what a Ronin katana can and can't do. As time goes by, thousands of people will have watched the series, and hopefully many of them will have learned what happens when swords hit things they should not.
man a real katana dont bend like that when hit with a baseball bat a real katana springs back when bended , is very hard to meke it loose the shape, of course u can scratch it bot not band it like that
strujan007 23 hours ago
WHY????
Shilenox 2 days ago
Not sure if stupid or troll.
P34CEFROG 2 days ago
stupid man with his fake katana sword....that sword can't even cut your dick dude
norazamarif 3 days ago
This has been flagged as spam show
this is a terriblly made video whacking a sword on metal you could show the same with a baseball bat the ide of swords is to cut through things
patrickjmm63 6 days ago
This has been flagged as spam show
this is a terriblly made video whacking a sword on metal you could show the same with a baseball bat the ide of swords is to cut through things
patrickjmm63 6 days ago
this is a terriblly made video whacking a sword on metal you could show the same with a baseball bat the ide of swords is to cut through things
patrickjmm63 6 days ago
do the blades come sharp?
megashitto 1 week ago in playlist Uploaded videos
@megashitto Yes, they are sharp and ready for use right out of the box.
Roninkatanas 1 week ago
урод
Felix27ish 3 weeks ago
@astralninja1 no...the Japanese did their own destructive tests. next i will be replicating some of them.
TorionSword 3 weeks ago
WHY NO DON'T DAMMIT MAN ...........
SinSear001 3 weeks ago
kind of disrespectful to Japanese culture dnt u think...
astralninja1 4 weeks ago
@astralninja1 How is showing the strength of these Japanese style swords disrespectful to the Japanese culture? That makes ZERO sense.
SPQQKY 3 weeks ago
@SPQQKY no what makes "ZERO" sense is you getting butt hurt about a question, is chopping scrap metal, hitting it with a bat and throwing it on the floor legit tests to show strength!? what about the strength or the user, or the temperature of the metal and all the other variables???...In your eyes cutting a rusty nail proves to you how strong a blade is not even taking into consideration if a Sword-forger saw this they would probably be filled with rage?! that's not disrespectful? gtfo u fanboy
astralninja1 3 weeks ago
@astralninja1 Ha ha. Shows how little brain you have in your head. Getting bent out of shape about someone testing the strength of a sword. Thinking in some odd way that it shows no respect for the Japanese (when it should be flattering that someone has enough respect for the Japanese sword to try to recreate it). Then flaming like a little school girl. I was hardly "butt hurt", I was asking a simple question to your stupid remark. You had to go an throw poop. Idiot!!!!!!!!!
SPQQKY 3 weeks ago
@astralninja1 BTW, the sword forger is the one that posted this video. Ronin Katana is the manufacturer and Marc is reviewer for the most popular sword forum on the web and doing this on THEIR behalf. And as Marc pointed out, the Japanese did their own destructive testing. So they must have been "dis-respecting" themselves. Go flex your web muscles somewhere else and let the intelligent people have a conversation here.
SPQQKY 3 weeks ago
@SPQQKY lol intelligent...ok mr smarty pants take your youtube victory....why not take a Japanese weapon and mass manufacture it for western people who have a hard-on for sharp things...oh btw Japanese people used to cut dead bodies, bamboo, tree logs and other swords and shields to test out their blades seeing as it took near enough a week to make one not go into their back yard and beat the shit out of it with a brick...but your right I will go flex my "web muscles" somewhere else :)
astralninja1 3 weeks ago
@astralninja1 You do realize that what the Japanese were trying to achieve so long ago when they made the tamahagane steel is what we now have in modern steel. The Japanese also mass produced swords by machine. Case in point the Gunto. So the Japanese do not have a hard-on for sharp things? Then why to they spend a shit load of money on them? Why do they still have schools? Also, they didn't have steel swing sets back in old Japan to test their swords on, but if they did......
SPQQKY 3 weeks ago
@SPQQKY So your telling me the Japanese mass produced swords in the Edu era? there is a big difference between mass produced swords and hand crafted, forged and engraved blades, From a person who dedicated his life to creating these swords...seeing a western guy beat the shit out of what he holds dear in life is not disrespectful?! I really can't believe you have spend 24 hours arguing this with me...accept it
astralninja1 3 weeks ago
@astralninja1 Why yes, they did. Not all pieces were presentation pieces. Now, during the Edo Period [Tokugawa Era] (you don't even have a clue on it's spelling, proper term), there was more peace than warfare, so not as many swords were made, but not all soldiers were adorned with beautiful pieces that took months to make. They needed something produced quickly that was effective. Something that could be damaged and not worry about it's cost and how pretty it was.
SPQQKY 3 weeks ago
@astralninja1 In this video I do not see a destructive test on a antique piece from Japan by the likes of such a great artist / smith as Muramasa Sengo, which of course would be an atrocity. I see him beating up a $200 production piece letting us know that it will be perfect for a student of the art to use at their dojo because it's effective and strong and will stand up to their occasional bad form. And it's only been like 8 hours. What have you been doing? Accept the facts
SPQQKY 3 weeks ago
@astralninja1 Hi Astral. The swords being destroyed are scratch and dent swords which had been sitting in the warehouse for some time. Several of them were sent to Torion Sword to do testing on. The point of these videos was to show what a Ronin katana can and can't do. As time goes by, thousands of people will have watched the series, and hopefully many of them will have learned what happens when swords hit things they should not.
Roninkatanas 3 weeks ago
Comment removed
SPQQKY 3 weeks ago
When you brought out the bat I was kinda hoping to see you cut the bat in half. also what country do you live in man??? looks nice for being winter.
scottyfett 1 month ago in playlist More videos from Roninkatanas
@scottyfett He's in Georgia, USA.
Quite honestly, if they made swords that could cut metal bats in half, I would own one. Actually, I would own two.
Roninkatanas 1 month ago
@Roninkatanas loln, no I thought the bat was made of wood.
scottyfett 1 month ago
@Roninkatanas they're called lightsabers :)
TheMrBHall 2 weeks ago
how much do one of these cost
TheAdam4472 1 month ago
@TheAdam4472 I think this one was a Dojo line sword, which is $175. The pro line is $275, and the elite line starts at $800.
Roninkatanas 1 month ago