Actually, they don't use clubs. By their cut and design, the ewok melee weapons that aren't spears fall under the warhammer category, used to transfer as much force as possible on a single, small, square of circular, or spiked, focal point. And believe me, there are worlds between getting hit by a bat or a beer bottle (large, broad impact means the force of the blow gets spread around quite a bit) and a hammer (focal impact means higher penetration, more force upon a small zone. Where a club may concuss you, a hammer will outright cave in your skull). In ye olden times, hammers and their ilk were the weapon of choice vs. enemies in heavy armour for pretty much that reason. Even if they didn't go through the material, they'd dent it, deform it and transfer enough force beneath it to cause serious to lethal injuries.
Actually, they don't use clubs. By their cut and design, the ewok melee weapons that aren't spears fall under the warhammer category, used to transfer as much force as possible on a single, small, square of circular, or spiked, focal point. And believe me, there are worlds between getting hit by a bat or a beer bottle (large, broad impact means the force of the blow gets spread around quite a bit) and a hammer (focal impact means higher penetration, more force upon a small zone. Where a club may concuss you, a hammer will outright cave in your skull). In ye olden times, hammers and their ilk were the weapon of choice vs. enemies in heavy armour for pretty much that reason. Even if they didn't go through the material, they'd dent it, deform it and transfer enough force beneath it to cause serious to lethal injuries.
I remember reading somewhere that in the late Middle Ages there were guys in heavy armor that got whacked with swords.
The swords never broke the armor but the guys wearing it died, because of impact damage.
I bet most of the weren't killed by people half their size
![]()
It happens...
![]()
Sure, in fiction.
I've yet to hear about a "little person" taking on a fully armored opponent in combat and succeeding. (And trust me, someone would have written that event down)
Actually, they don't use clubs. By their cut and design, the ewok melee weapons that aren't spears fall under the warhammer category, used to transfer as much force as possible on a single, small, square of circular, or spiked, focal point. And believe me, there are worlds between getting hit by a bat or a beer bottle (large, broad impact means the force of the blow gets spread around quite a bit) and a hammer (focal impact means higher penetration, more force upon a small zone. Where a club may concuss you, a hammer will outright cave in your skull). In ye olden times, hammers and their ilk were the weapon of choice vs. enemies in heavy armour for pretty much that reason. Even if they didn't go through the material, they'd dent it, deform it and transfer enough force beneath it to cause serious to lethal injuries.
Actually, they don't use clubs. By their cut and design, the ewok melee weapons that aren't spears fall under the warhammer category, used to transfer as much force as possible on a single, small, square of circular, or spiked, focal point. And believe me, there are worlds between getting hit by a bat or a beer bottle (large, broad impact means the force of the blow gets spread around quite a bit) and a hammer (focal impact means higher penetration, more force upon a small zone. Where a club may concuss you, a hammer will outright cave in your skull). In ye olden times, hammers and their ilk were the weapon of choice vs. enemies in heavy armour for pretty much that reason. Even if they didn't go through the material, they'd dent it, deform it and transfer enough force beneath it to cause serious to lethal injuries.
I remember reading somewhere that in the late Middle Ages there were guys in heavy armor that got whacked with swords.
The swords never broke the armor but the guys wearing it died, because of impact damage.
I bet most of the weren't killed by people half their size
![]()
Do you have a problem with cavemen taking down mastadons with spears? What about Inuit dealing with polar bears? Each of those examples is someone less than half the size of their target, and well under half the mass, yet succeeding time and time again.
Completely different things.