the japanese forged katana is the toughest sharpest and the best blades in the world. the sharp end can slice through rocks if skilled and the blunt end of the sword is hard enough to break a katana. i think this japanese master forged a sword from the best materials and called it the nested dragon or sometin and it is now sold at more than a million dollars!!
2007-02-19 23:00:28
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Well, really, the sharpness of the sword all depends on the swordcrafter and the skill of the wielder. The world's worst swordmaker could give the worst sword he has(that, of course, still can work, but it is of poor quality) and a decent or good swordsman could still kill with it.
But I'd have to bet if the world's best swordsmith could make any one sword, I'd have to say the katana is one of the sharpest swords that could be forged. But then, it is, of course, beat out by the lightsaber, able to cut through droids and various other metals(there's one metal it cannot cut).
2007-02-20 00:14:18
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answer #2
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answered by The World Ends with You 5
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I think, "Sharpest WORDS", It Comes Fast, without any Need, and Without Cut by the Sharpest Sword.
2016-05-23 22:14:16
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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the one that the smith or user sharpened the most that day before practicing with it and somehow dulling the edge.
no matter how sharp it is it still will have problems cutting through steel and will not be able to cut through another sword.
so it really doesn't matter. while many people do demos of cutting steel (destructive testing- more done to test the quality of the sword, not for its ability to cut- but for its ability to cut and not be damaged), those demos are of stationary targets. real armor is not only tough, but angled to deflect strikes that are head on.
using a sword against plate armor is difficult that is why the techniques against plate armor were done differently, you didn't cut against an armored oppoenent you used "half-swording" techniques combined with special grappling manuvers that complemented that. The art of using a sword against a plate armored opponent is an entirely different type of swordsmanship training.
The guards are different, the manner in which the sword is gripped is different (gripped on the blade for more point control- more like a spear) and the way it was used is different.
2007-02-20 08:37:04
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Assault
The sharpest sword in the world. Glows in red. Spherical guard. The tip of the sword is very soft, and can vibrate. Can easily and very quickly switch the position from which the sword is thrust at will. Being so sharp and potent, the tremor it creates on shattering the opponent's weapon can be very staggering.
2007-02-19 23:00:49
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answer #5
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answered by L. 3
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There are many new scientificly created metals that are thin, light and can be shaped into razor sharp swords. Many of these metals are created using compound metals mixed with polymers. Take for instance the face of a golf club, made super hard by titianium, or the tip of a cirular saw blade made out of carbide. Some blades are even made out of crushed diamonds. Then there are nylon/silicone/polyresin knife blades that are next to impossible to dull. Good luck finding a sword made out of one of these hybrid metals, the blades are currently only made for scientific use and are not shaped in the form of a sword.
2007-02-20 11:15:59
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answer #6
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answered by Marswarn W 1
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Since you did not mention the period of history of the sword. I'll think that the laser sword used in "starwars' movie is the sharpest. All metal, jade, wood, brass sword will perish before it. (With today technology it is possible)
2007-02-19 23:06:41
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answer #7
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answered by Ah Kiat 1
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A Hatori Hanzo sword according to Kill Bill 2! *haha*
2007-02-19 22:59:01
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answer #8
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answered by Mrs C 3
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a pen can be .SOmetimes the words worse than it
2007-02-19 22:58:50
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answer #9
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answered by curious 3
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id have to say a japanese katana
2007-02-19 22:58:29
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answer #10
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answered by ssuasw 3
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