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  2. Monk (Dungeons & Dragons) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monk_(Dungeons_&_Dragons)

    Crusading knights encountered the assassins, but the monk is a particularly Eastern phenomenon. As a result, the monk's roots were sometimes conflated, such that one set of lead miniatures had Franciscan-style monks posed in martial arts stances".

  3. Tome of Battle: The Book of Nine Swords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tome_of_Battle:_The_Book...

    The martial arts system presented in the book bears a passing resemblance to the magic system of D&D. Martial arts maneuvers are readied (instead of being memorized); unlike spells in the magic system, only one maneuver can be readied at a time. Once maneuvers are expended, each class has a method of recovering them.

  4. Magic in Dungeons & Dragons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_in_Dungeons_&_Dragons

    [77] [78] The spell's ability to cause automatic damage makes it one of the most-used spells. [79] In the initial release of 4th edition, magic missile required an attack roll. The July 2010 update changed this back to an automatic hit, albeit with a lower amount of damage. Meteor Swarm: Four meteors fly forward and explode like Fireballs. One ...

  5. Tonfa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonfa

    A pair of tonfa A pair of tonfa with a rounded body throughout.. The tonfa (Okinawan: トンファー tonfā, Chinese: 柺; pinyin: guǎi lit. old man's staff / "crutch", also spelled as tongfa or tuifa, also known as T-baton [1]) is a melee weapon with its origins in the armed component of Okinawan martial arts where it is known as the tunkua.

  6. Touch of Death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Touch_of_Death

    The touch of death (or death-point striking) is any martial arts technique reputed to kill using seemingly less than lethal force targeted at specific areas of the body.. The concept known as dim mak (simplified Chinese: 点脉; traditional Chinese: 點脈; pinyin: diǎnmài; Jyutping: dim 2 mak 6; lit. 'press artery'), alternatively diǎnxué (simplified Chinese: 点穴; traditional Chinese ...

  7. Kusarigama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kusarigama

    Ellis Amdur’s book Old School: Essays on Japanese Martial Traditions retells a myth about the origin of the kusarigama. In the story, a farmer who used a farming sickle to cut his rice plants was attacked by a samurai. The farmer used the sickle with a chain attachment to defeat the warrior.

  8. Fatalities in mixed martial arts contests - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatalities_in_mixed...

    15-year-old Alfredo Castro Herrera died on April 14, 1981, following an unsanctioned "mixed martial arts" match described in the St. Louis Globe Democrat as "boxing mixed with karate and judo" (April 15, 1981 issue) in Tijuana, Mexico, where he was knocked out. Herrera's opponent was Angel Luis Rodriguez.

  9. Rope dart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_dart

    The rope dart or rope javelin (simplified Chinese: 绳镖; traditional Chinese: 繩鏢; pinyin: shéng biāo, Japanese: 縄鏢 or 縄標: Jōhyō), is one of the flexible weapons in Chinese martial arts. Other weapons in this family include the meteor hammer, flying claws, Fei Tou flying weight, and chain whip.