And of course, I couldn't resist beginning the thread with the best fighting advice ever:

Now, I'll give you three guesses whether we have a maneuver that's literally called Slip & Strike or not.Curiously, the master Fiore Dei Liberi in his treatise of 1410 reasonably advised: "When someone strikes to your leg, step slip with your forefoot. You retreat backwards and strike a downward cut in his head..."
This is all undoubtedly true, but... as with most things in life, nothing is really as simple as it seems.hector wrote:If anyone is wondering about how that advice works (probably not, but there might be one or two), it's because you have to be much closer to hit a person's leg than to hit their head - even after you are out of their range, they're still in your range assuming similar length weapons.
Yes! The protection of center grip shields has much to do with geometry. You hold it out in front of you (edge first) and simply the virtue of doing so puts the legs so far away from the opponent as to make them extremely dangerous to attack. With a strap shield, you lose a lot of that distance, so, the legs become easier to reach.hector wrote:Now there's some interesting reading. As for legs being common targets with sword and shield (presumably strapped on shields rather than centre grip)
Indeed!hector wrote:To paraphrase Roland Warzecha, the only way that stops being true is if your arm grows out of your arse.
..Ouch.higgins wrote:When trying out new armor configurations, one would be wise to try them out with padded weapons or nylon wasters before moving on to real steel.
*limps off*
Thankfully not. I tried skipping the suspenders to get more agility to my upper body and relied on the belt alone to hold all my leg armor up. Worked fine for three trainings... and then it didn't. Somehow the poleyns slid waaaay down and basically exposed my whole knee. The first sign of anything being wrong was me being hit. I'll try to schedule an MRI tomorrow.Agamemnon wrote:..Ouch.
At least you weren't testing cups?