Re: Quick Question - rules for heavy bows
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Re: Quick Question - rules for heavy bows
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Re: Quick Question - rules for heavy bows
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Problem is, bow with the same ST as user doesn't feel like a warbow. It's more like hunting bow. Second point, as far as I know, you need lighter bows for horseback, and for shooting from the castle walls you need lighter ones too. |
Re: Quick Question - rules for heavy bows
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Your second point is a good one. A lot of the gentry, knights, men-at-arms and nobles were amateur archers. They hunted and they might even be good at shooting deer with their bows. Why didn't they take bows to war? Because of social attitudes, yes, but such attitudes rarely last very long if they are contrary to good tactics. The association of bows with the yeomanry made sense, because they had the ample nutrition needed to develop that kind of strength, and the free time to shoot bows enough so that their aiming was unconscious, done with the body rather than sighting along the arrow. Having amateur archers also bring their bows wouldn't add anything, because the men who grew up pulling warbows were shooting at much longer range than hunting bows could reach, to force men in formation all the way on the other side of a battlefield to slow their advance or perhaps even stop entirely in some convenient cover. They were mostly 'suppressive fire', which is an important component of combined arms. The way I've seen it described is that archers don't aim in the same way that top skeet or trap shooters don't aim with their shotgun. They aim with their whole body and when their stance is right, the shot is right. |
Re: Quick Question - rules for heavy bows
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And by aiming a little bit I meant one or even half of the second, because you not keeping bow static while drawing, so you need at least position it in the right direction and 'aim'. Maybe you are right, and it's not really aiming... And with heavy bow you need more than second to draw, at least from my experience. Another thing is to draw and hold a bow, you use your whole body, not one arm. For amateur shooting knights and man-at-arms... I don't know why you even need that. If all your army is archers... That won't go well, I suppose. If this was the winning strategy, than I suppose we would see only archers in historical armies. Next warbows are heavy for a reason. So you can't just came with your hunting bow and be useful. Warbows are tiring. You don't want your army to get tired before the fight. Edit: rereading my first comment I now understood why it sounds like that. I'm not a strong guy meaning that maybe it's not holding bow is hard, maybe I'm weak. It's not that I'm so inhumanly strong for my weight) sorry for that. I'm bad in English too)). |
Re: Quick Question - rules for heavy bows
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Re: Quick Question - rules for heavy bows
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Having your cavalry force join your foot archer blocks would be all kinds of weird. (Curious whether they avoided shooting bows during sieges as well, though. It's something I never hear about.) |
Re: Quick Question - rules for heavy bows
Assuming similar capability of bows, the side firing from the height of a wall would have a decisive range advantage over an archer below. I suspect that beseigers would only engage in archery in support of determined assault efforts (or feints, I suppose).
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Re: Quick Question - rules for heavy bows
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But that's not really relevant to the question, because the people in question are on both sides of the wall. |
Re: Quick Question - rules for heavy bows
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