Sword Drag: Difference between revisions

m
update links
m (update links)
Line 2:
A character who carries a sword will, at some point, drag the tip of the blade across a floor or wall. This is usually done to intimidate or to catch the attention of another character, or simply [[Rule of Cool|to invoke the coolness factor]], but rarely does it have any [[Justified Trope|practical application]]. It can also be associated with an [[Ax Crazy]] character or a [[Villainous Breakdown]], because if someone holding a sword goes into a [[Primal Stance]] or becomes [[Limp and Livid]], they tend to forget they're holding it and just let it drag. Or it might just be that they can't actually lift the sword for any length of time, either because they're tired or the sword is too big.
 
It generally causes [[Swirling Dust]] and [[Sword Sparks]], but with the floor, not another sword. Might also be the source of a [[Sinister Scraping Sound]].
 
Naturally, this would be a terrible maneuver to use in real life as it would wear down any good sword, slow down the wielder, and telegraph the coming attack obviously. Thankfully in fiction, we have the [[Rule of Cool]] to make up for that.
Line 12:
* Variation: Combusken's Sky Uppercut in the ''[[Pokémon (anime)|Pokémon]]'' anime, starts with him dragging the tips of his claws along the floor, making some sparks and then doing the Uppercut. That only happened during a couple of instances in the Kanto Grand Festival. The attack isn't normally executed like that.
** Another variant: when Ash was battling to capture the Taillow that has been menacing the group, the Taillow drops to the river and dips its wings against the water while charging towards Pikachu.
* [[Justified Trope|Justified]] in ''[[Claymore]]'', in which a secondary character use this to boost the power of her attack (and use an unbreakable sword). Her opponent do note that it's a very predictable move that you can't pull twice.
* Found aplenty in ''[[Bleach]]'', often with character's swords ripping clean through walls without breaking stride.
* Mugen of ''[[Samurai Champloo]]'' does this once or twice. However, like much of the chambara expressed the series, it is portrayed more realistically, with Mugen sliding the side of his sword rather than carving into the floor with the tip.
Line 39:
== Films -- Live-Action ==
* [[A Nightmare on Elm Street|Freddy Krueger]] does this with his claws against walls, but then, literally, his whole schtick is being as frightening as he can...
* In ''[[Hotel Rwanda]]'', the extremist Hutus intimidatingly slide their machetes along roads while marching toward the slaughter of Tutsi refugees.
* The Hutu extremists also do this in ''[[Sometimes In April]]'', another movie about the Rwandan Genocide.
* Used realistically in ''[[Rob Roy]]'' to indicate that the character is so exhausted from less than five minutes' fighting that he can barely lift his sword.
Line 53:
== Literature ==
* Quite a few people do this with lightsabers in the [[Star Wars Expanded Universe]], starting in ''[[The Thrawn Trilogy]]''. When you need to get to the next room, or the floor beneath this one, and you don't have time to find a door or a stairwell, it's just expedient to drag a lightsaber through it, either carving a hole or just weakening it enough to break.
 
 
== Live-Action TV ==
* In ''[[Garo]]'', Suzumura Rei does this at least once to scare Kaoru.
* Used in the series ''[[Highlander (TV series)|Highlander]]''.
* Terui Ryuu does this with the Engine Blade during episode 18 of ''[[Kamen Rider Double]]'' prior to his transformation into Kamen Rider Accel. This may count as a subversion though, since it's not to look intimidating, but rather because the blade is to heavy to carry normally while untransformed.
Line 63:
 
== Video Games ==
* {{spoiler|Roxas}} does this {{spoiler|with his Keyblades}} during a cutscene fight in ''[[Kingdom Hearts]] 2''.
* Enemies with weapons like lead pipes and heavy flashlights will occasionally do this in ''[[BioshockBioShock (series)]]''.
* In ''[[Final Fantasy VIII]]'', the Seifer vs. Squall fight in cutscene makes use of this extensively.
* Pyramid Head in ''[[Silent Hill]].'' The [[Sinister Scraping Sound|loud scraping/whining noise of his giant blade]] becomes [[Oh Crap|a signal of his approach]]. Justified in that Pyramid Head's weapon, the Great Knife, is a meat-cleaver blade roughly the size of a Buick.
Line 84:
* This happens in ''[[Fable]]'' if you try to wield a heavy weapon without sufficient strength.
* Occurs twice in ''[[Prototype (video game)|Prototype]]'', both with Alex Mercer and Captain Cross. Mercer's example comes when he finally defeats the parasite that's been restricting his powers; in a fairly awesome scene, he develops both the Armor and the Blade powers, dragging the tip of the blade in a circle around him. Cross's example is dragging his shock staff across the ground in anticipation of fighting Infected. Both examples are justified, somewhat: Alex's blade is a shapeshifter weapon, so he can easily repair any potential damage, and Cross's staff doesn't have an edge to ruin.
* Kojuro in ''[[Sengoku Basara]]'' does this when he gets particularly pissed off, loses all composure as a swordsman and enters [[Unstoppable Rage|Berserk Mode]], apparently to seem more threatening toward his opponents. In the anime season 2 he pulls it off in fine style against Hanbe and his mooks.
* The [[League of Legends]] champion [[The Berserker|Tryndamere]] runs around dragging his sword behind him with one hand. But then again, [[BFS|with a sword like that]], you have to wonder if he kills stuff by cutting with the blade's edge or just smashing with the weight of it.
* The Black Knights from [[Dark Souls]] tend to do this a bit. Semi-justified, since it's usually the prelude to a big, air-launching upwards sweep attack. A player armed with a Black Knight weapon can do this as well.