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  2. List of fictional swords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_swords

    Kijin-marukuni-shige: A katana belonging to foreign-exchange student Susan in Chapter 1, Volume 8 of High School DxD. Rain Dragon: The sword owned by Judge Dee in the novels of Robert van Gulik; Shisui: Shisui (止水; Stopping Water) is a white-wood shirasaya (a katana without a tsuba/guard) wielded by Motoko Aoyama throughout most of Love ...

  3. Japanese swords in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_swords_in_fiction

    Carrying a non-sealed katana is illegal in present-day Japan, but in fiction this law is often ignored or circumvented to allow characters to carry katana as a matter of artistic license. For instance, some stories state that carrying weapons has been permitted due to a serious increase in crimes or an invasion of monsters from other dimensions.

  4. List of magical weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_magical_weapons

    The Masamune sword is by far the most referenced Japanese sword in popular fiction, ranging through books, movies and computer games. Murasame – A magical katana that mentioned in fiction Nansō Satomi Hakkenden , it said the blade can moist itself to wash off the blood stain for keeping it sharp.

  5. Also, if I can point out that "katana" refers to how you wear it, technically speaking. -JD On 4), I wrote a new section about works of fiction and katana with minimal informations intending to expand it into a full article. Because katana appears in so many fictions including video games, I think it deserves an article solely dedicated to it.

  6. Weapons in science fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weapons_in_science_fiction

    At its most prosaic, science fiction features an endless variety of sidearms—mostly variations on real weapons such as guns and swords. Among the best-known of these are the phaser—used in the Star Trek television series, films, and novels—and the lightsaber and blaster—featured in Star Wars movies, comics, novels, and TV shows.

  7. The Dull Sword - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dull_Sword

    ' dull-edged sword '; gatana is rendaku of katana) is a short comedic jidaigeki about a dim-witted self-appointed samurai. He gets fooled and buys a dull sword from a merchant. The samurai, trying to figure out why his new sword cannot cut anyone he strikes, tries desperately to attack random townspeople who defend themselves and knock him out.

  8. Magic sword - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_sword

    Movies and television across varying genres depict swords with magical qualities. In the Star Wars saga, which employs many themes of classical mythology, the lightsaber can be seen as a science fiction with a mythological analogue of the magic swords of myth. The device appears to defy the laws of modern technology, however studies and ...

  9. The Sword of Doom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sword_of_Doom

    The Sword of Doom is an adaptation of Daibosatsu Toge (lit. ' Great Bodhisattva Pass '), a novel that has remained popular since its initial release in 1913, a year after the death of the Emperor Meiji, "the ruler who oversaw Japan's transition from hermetically sealed feudal state to modern nation."