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Incomplete, but there's no sense keeping Swords and maces together anymore. I'm looking forward to dealing with the redirects...
 
 
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{{Era|AC2|ACB|ACR|AC3}}
{{Era|Weapons}}{{WP-REAL|Blunt instrument}}
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{{Update|''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]'' and ''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]''}}
[[File:Prussianwar.png|250px|thumb|A Prussian War Hammer]]
[[File:Condottiero-warhammer-acII.png|250px|thumb|A Prussian War Hammer]]
'''Blunt weapons''' were [[weapons]] used by those who wished to inflict bone-breaking damage against opponents. They were commonly wielded by [[guards]] and members of the [[Assassins|Assassin Order]].
'''Blunt weapons''', or '''bludgeoning weapons''',<ref name="AC2 guide">''[[Assassin's Creed II: Official Game Guide]]''</ref> are a class of melee weapons designed to inflict damage through blunt force trauma rather than through piercing or slicing. They are characterized by a general lack of sharp edges–though flanged variants exist–serving to crush targets with such force that bones may even be fractured. Most commonly, weapons that fall under this category include medium weapons such as [[mace]]s, [[club]]s, and [[war hammer]]s. Tools not intended for use as weapons but [[improvised weapons|improvised]] in such a capacity can qualify as blunt weapons in practice if the end used to inflict injury is dull.


Blunt weapons, much like [[swords]], possessed long reach, great power, and a quick attack rate. As such, they could be seen as some of the most balanced weapons available.
Throughout history, blunt weapons have been utilized in warfare, seeing service with city guards and field [[soldier]]s alike. They were also employed, to a lesser extent, by members of the [[Assassins|Assassin Brotherhood]], who generally preferred the [[sword]] as standard equipment instead. As with their bladed counterparts, maces and war hammers were gradually phased out with the advent of [[firearm]] technology. Nevertheless, just as the case with shorter bladed weapons (i.e. [[Short blade|knives]]), they persist as the standard equipment of many [[police]] and security officers in the form of batons.
 
Much like swords, blunt weapons possess long reach, great power, and a quick attack rate, though not as much as [[long weapon]]s, [[heavy weapon]]s, and [[short blade]]s respectively, and are among the more balanced of melee weapons.
 
==Description==
As their name suggests, blunt weapons are, in the simplest terms, weapons that are blunt, lacking sharp edges with which injury can be inflicted through cutting or piercing—at least in hindsight. Technically, however, blunt weapons do not have to be entirely devoid of sharp points, a prominent example being the [[Flanged Mace|flanged mace]].<ref name="AC2">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref> Sophisticated blunt weapons, including the [[Iron Blade War Club|iron blade war club]], may even be bladed or possess keen edges to augment their deadliness.<ref name="AC3">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''</ref> As a result, they can perhaps more accurately be described as weapons designed for crushing rather than thrusting or slashing attacks.


==History==
==History==
Blunt weapons have been a highly common and frequently used selection of weaponry in the art of warfare, and have seen action in the millennia-long [[Assassin-Templar War]]. The earliest known use of blunt weapons by the Assassins was during the early 13th century, by the [[Levantine Assassins]] of [[Masyaf]].<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''</ref>
As the most basic form of weaponry, blunt weapons have been universally utilized as weapons for the entirety of human history. The development of swords and [[spear]]s led to clubs being superseded as the common weapon for warfare, although more and more sophisticated variants of blunt weapons continued to be invented, such as maces and war hammers.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="ACB">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''</ref><ref name="ACR">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''</ref><ref name="ACU">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]''</ref> Both saw service with city guards and in the field of battle during the course of [[Europe]]an and [[Middle East]]ern history, and in the [[Siege of Masyaf]] in 1176, they were wielded by select units of the [[Saracens|Saracen]] cavalry.<ref name="TSC">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade]]''</ref>


==Statistics==
Among the indigenous peoples of the Americas, such as the [[Kanien'kehá:ka]], who did not smith swords, war clubs became the primary wartime weapon alongside hatchets called [[tomahawks]].<ref name="AC3" /> Uniquely, the Mesoamericans invented a hybrid between the sword and the club, the [[macuahuitl]], a flattened wooden club studded with obsidian blades all along its edges.<ref name="AC3L">''[[Assassin's Creed III: Liberation]]''</ref>
===15th century===
 
====Italy====
While the Assassins and [[Templars]] more often serviced swords, blunt weapons still found favor among certain members of both factions, such as the [[Ireland|Irish]] carpenter [[John O'Brien]] and the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] bombardier [[Kadir]].<ref name="AC3" /><ref name="ACR" /> The advance of firearm technology gradually rendered maces and war hammers obsolete, but the unconventional nature of the [[Assassin-Templar War|war]] between the Assassins and the Templars ensured that these weapons were phased out slower among their groups. Indeed, during the [[French Revolution]], the [[Parisian Brotherhood of Assassins|Parisian Brotherhood]] armed themselves with a diverse range of equipment, including a variety of blunt weapons, such as [[Ceremonial long mace|long mace]]s, [[Morningstar|morning star]]s, and [[Heavy War Mace|heavy war mace]]s, weapons that were no longer in standard use among contemporary soldiers of regular armies.<ref name="ACU" />
{|border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
 
From the [[Industrial Revolution]] onward, batons prevailed as the common blunt weapon still in use, figuring as part of the standard equipment of police and security guards throughout the world, including those in employ with the [[Metropolitan Police Service]] and [[Abstergo Industries]].<ref name="AC3" /><ref name="ACS">''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]''</ref><ref name="ACfilm">[[Assassin's Creed (film)|''Assassin's Cree'' film]]</ref><ref name="ACFT">''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]''</ref>
 
==Weapon statistics==
===Peloponnesian War (5th century BCE)===
====Heavy blunts====
{|class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
!width="5%"|Name
!width="5%"|Name
!width="5%"|Damage
!width="5%"|Rarity
!width="5%"|Speed
!width="5%"|DPS (Max Lvl 99)
!width="5%"|Deflect
!width="10%"|Attributes
!width="5%"|Cost
!width="5%"|Availability
!width="5%"|Availability
|-
|-
![[Mercenario War Hammer]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Odyssey Heavy blunt"}}
|1
|1
|3
|1900ƒ
|Sequence 3
|-
![[Maul]]
|2
|1
|2
|3600ƒ
|Sequence 4
|-
![[Flanged Mace]]
|3
|3
|3
|10500ƒ
|Sequence 6
|-
![[Cavalieri Mace]]
|4
|2
|2
|20800ƒ
|Sequence 7
|-
![[Condottiero War Hammer]]
|5
|3
|4
|35000ƒ
|Collect 50 feathers
|}
|}


===16th century===
====Staffs====
====Rome====
{|class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
{|border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
!width="5%"|Name
!width="5%"|Name
!width="5%"|Damage
!width="5%"|Rarity
!width="5%"|Speed
!width="5%"|DPS (Max Lvl 99)
!width="5%"|Deflect
!width="10%"|Attributes
!width="5%"|Cost
!width="5%"|Availability
!width="5%"|Availability
|-
|-
![[Maul]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Odyssey Staff"}}
|2
|}
|1
 
|2
===Ptolemaic Egypt (1st century BCE)===
|N/A
====Heavy blunts====
|Sequence 3
{| class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
! width="5%" |Name
! width="5%" |Rarity
! width="5%" |Quality (Max Level 55)
! width="5%" |Damage (Max Level 55)
! width="5%" |Attributes
! width="5%" |Availability
|-
|-
![[Mercenario War Hammer]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Origins Heavy blunt"}}
|1
|}
|3
 
|5
====Scepters====
|2750ƒ
{| class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
|Sequence 4
! width="5%" |Name
! width="5%" |Rarity
! width="5%" |Quality (Max Level 55)
! width="5%" |Damage (Max Level 55)
! width="5%" |Attributes
! width="5%" |Availability
|-
|-
![[Lucerne Hammer]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Origins Scepter"}}
|2
|}
|2
<small>**Only available after downloading ''[[The Curse of the Pharaohs]]''</small>
|2
 
|6370ƒ
===Anglo-Saxon England (9th century)===
|Sequence 5
{|class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
! width="5%" |Name
! width="5%" |Class
! width="5%" |Atk
! width="5%" |Spd
! width="5%" |Stun
! width="5%" |Crit Pre
! width="5%" |Wgt
! width="10%" |Availability
|-
|-
![[Condottiero Mace]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Valhalla Hammer"}}
|3
|}
|5
 
|3
===Spanish Renaissance (15th century)===
|11600ƒ
{|class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
|Sequence 6
!width="20%" |Name
!width="10%" |Tier
!width="5%" |Damage
!width="5%" |Speed
!width="10%" |Miss Chance
!width="20%" |Modifiers
!width="20%" |Requirements
|-
|-
![[Condottiero War Hammer]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Rebellion Hammer"}}
|5
|}
|3
 
|4
===Italian Renaissance (15th century)===
|17200ƒ
{| class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
|Sequence 8
! width="5%" |Name
! width="5%" |Damage
! width="5%" |Speed
! width="5%" |Deflect
! width="5%" |Cost
! width="5%" |Availability
|-
|-
![[Caveleri Mace]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"II Blunt"}}
|2
|1
|1
|6400ƒ
|Renovate 5 blacksmiths
|}
|}


====Constantinople and Derinkuyu====
===Italian Renaissance (16th century)===
{|border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
{| class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
!width="5%"|Name
! width="5%" |Name
!width="5%"|Damage
! width="5%" |Damage
!width="5%"|Speed
! width="5%" |Speed
!width="5%"|Deflect
! width="5%" |Deflect
!width="5%"|Cost
! width="5%" |Cost
!width="5%"|Availability
! width="5%" |Availability
|-
|-
![[Prussian War Hammer]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Brotherhood Blunt"}}
|1
|}
|3
 
|3
===Ottoman Empire (16th century)===
|{{Ak|2290}}
{| class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
|Sequence 2
! width="5%" |Name
! width="5%" |Damage
! width="5%" |Speed
! width="5%" |Deflect
! width="5%" |Cost
! width="5%" |Availability
|-
|-
![[Mercenario War Hammer]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Revelations Blunt"}}
|2
|}
|1
 
|1
===American Revolution===
|{{Ak|7360}}
{| class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
|Sequence 4
! width="5%" |Name
|-
! width="5%" |Damage
![[Condottiero Mace]]
! width="5%" |Speed
|2
! width="5%" |Combo
|2
! width="5%" |Cost
|2
! width="5%" |Availability
|{{Ak|10120}}
|Sequence 4
|-
|-
![[Sledgehammer]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"III Blunt weapon"}}
|3
|4
|1
|{{Ak|13340}}
|Sequence 5
|-
![[Byzantine Mace]]
|3
|5
|3
|{{Ak|18055}}
|Sequence 7
|-
![[Ottoman Mace]]
|4
|4
|2
|N/A
|Complete all Thieves Guild challenges
|}
|}


===18th century===
===French Revolution===
====British Colonial America====
{| class="wikitable sortable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
{|border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;"
! width="5%" |Name
!width="5%"|Name
! width="5%" |Level
!width="5%"|Damage
! width="5%" |Damage
!width="5%"|Speed
! width="5%" |Parry
!width="5%"|Combo
! width="5%" |Speed
!width="5%"|Cost
! width="5%" |Range
!width="5%"|Availability
! width="5%" |Cost
|-
! width="5%" |Modifiers
![[Gunstock War Club]]
! width="5%" |Availability
|3
|4
|2
|£6500
|Sequence 6
|-
![[Wooden War Club]]
|2
|3
|3
|£2650
|Sequence 6
|-
![[Stonehead War Club]]
|3
|1
|2
|£3850
|Sequence 9
|-
![[Obwandiyag's War Club]]
|5
|5
|1
|N/A
|Sequence 7
|-
|-
![[Iron Blade Club]]
{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Unity Blunt"}}
|4
|5
|1
|N/A
|Craft at Homestead
|}
|}


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*In ''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'', Ezio could perform pistol executions with blunt weapons, though they used the same animations and sounds as swords did.
*In ''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'', Ezio can perform pistol executions with blunt weapons, though they use the same animations and sounds as swords did.
**In ''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'', pistol executions could no longer be performed with a blunt weapon.
**In ''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'', pistol executions can no longer be performed with a blunt weapon.
*Picking up brooms or rakes as weapons in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' allows them to function as blunt weapons and perform certain executions. Killing a guard with a broom grants the Spring Cleaning achievement.
*In ''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'', blunt weapons are classified as "non-lethal" and can never be used to kill an enemy, at most knocking one unconscious. This is in spite of the fact that certain techniques the player character Arno Dorian uses with blunt weapons very clearly crushes an enemy's spine, skull, or chest while some blunt weapons are actually covered in sharp spikes.
**[[Rifle]]s in ''Assassin's Creed: Unity'' are also classified as "non-lethal" because, when used in melee combat, they function as blunt weapons.
 
==Appearances==
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Bloodlines]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed III: Liberation]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]''
*[[Assassin's Creed (film)|''Assassin's Cree'' film]]
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
<!--[es:Armas contundentes]-->
[[Category:Weapons]]
[[Category:5th century BCE weapons]]
[[Category:1st century BCE weapons]]
[[Category:9th century weapons]]
[[Category:15th century weapons]]
[[Category:16th century weapons]]
[[Category:18th century weapons]]
[[Category:21st century weapons]]

Latest revision as of 23:22, 11 May 2026

Patience, brothers. Soon we will reveal the secrets of Assassin's Creed: Origins and Assassin's Creed: Odyssey.

This article has been identified as being out of date. Please update the article to reflect recent releases and then remove this template once done.

A Prussian War Hammer

Blunt weapons, or bludgeoning weapons,[1] are a class of melee weapons designed to inflict damage through blunt force trauma rather than through piercing or slicing. They are characterized by a general lack of sharp edges–though flanged variants exist–serving to crush targets with such force that bones may even be fractured. Most commonly, weapons that fall under this category include medium weapons such as maces, clubs, and war hammers. Tools not intended for use as weapons but improvised in such a capacity can qualify as blunt weapons in practice if the end used to inflict injury is dull.

Throughout history, blunt weapons have been utilized in warfare, seeing service with city guards and field soldiers alike. They were also employed, to a lesser extent, by members of the Assassin Brotherhood, who generally preferred the sword as standard equipment instead. As with their bladed counterparts, maces and war hammers were gradually phased out with the advent of firearm technology. Nevertheless, just as the case with shorter bladed weapons (i.e. knives), they persist as the standard equipment of many police and security officers in the form of batons.

Much like swords, blunt weapons possess long reach, great power, and a quick attack rate, though not as much as long weapons, heavy weapons, and short blades respectively, and are among the more balanced of melee weapons.

Description[edit | edit source]

As their name suggests, blunt weapons are, in the simplest terms, weapons that are blunt, lacking sharp edges with which injury can be inflicted through cutting or piercing—at least in hindsight. Technically, however, blunt weapons do not have to be entirely devoid of sharp points, a prominent example being the flanged mace.[2] Sophisticated blunt weapons, including the iron blade war club, may even be bladed or possess keen edges to augment their deadliness.[3] As a result, they can perhaps more accurately be described as weapons designed for crushing rather than thrusting or slashing attacks.

History[edit | edit source]

As the most basic form of weaponry, blunt weapons have been universally utilized as weapons for the entirety of human history. The development of swords and spears led to clubs being superseded as the common weapon for warfare, although more and more sophisticated variants of blunt weapons continued to be invented, such as maces and war hammers.[2][4][5][6] Both saw service with city guards and in the field of battle during the course of European and Middle Eastern history, and in the Siege of Masyaf in 1176, they were wielded by select units of the Saracen cavalry.[7]

Among the indigenous peoples of the Americas, such as the Kanien'kehá:ka, who did not smith swords, war clubs became the primary wartime weapon alongside hatchets called tomahawks.[3] Uniquely, the Mesoamericans invented a hybrid between the sword and the club, the macuahuitl, a flattened wooden club studded with obsidian blades all along its edges.[8]

While the Assassins and Templars more often serviced swords, blunt weapons still found favor among certain members of both factions, such as the Irish carpenter John O'Brien and the Ottoman bombardier Kadir.[3][5] The advance of firearm technology gradually rendered maces and war hammers obsolete, but the unconventional nature of the war between the Assassins and the Templars ensured that these weapons were phased out slower among their groups. Indeed, during the French Revolution, the Parisian Brotherhood armed themselves with a diverse range of equipment, including a variety of blunt weapons, such as long maces, morning stars, and heavy war maces, weapons that were no longer in standard use among contemporary soldiers of regular armies.[6]

From the Industrial Revolution onward, batons prevailed as the common blunt weapon still in use, figuring as part of the standard equipment of police and security guards throughout the world, including those in employ with the Metropolitan Police Service and Abstergo Industries.[3][9][10][11]

Weapon statistics[edit | edit source]

Peloponnesian War (5th century BCE)[edit | edit source]

Heavy blunts[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Odyssey Heavy blunt"}}
Name Rarity DPS (Max Lvl 99) Attributes Availability

Staffs[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Odyssey Staff"}}
Name Rarity DPS (Max Lvl 99) Attributes Availability

Ptolemaic Egypt (1st century BCE)[edit | edit source]

Heavy blunts[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Origins Heavy blunt"}}
Name Rarity Quality (Max Level 55) Damage (Max Level 55) Attributes Availability

Scepters[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Origins Scepter"}}
Name Rarity Quality (Max Level 55) Damage (Max Level 55) Attributes Availability

**Only available after downloading The Curse of the Pharaohs

Anglo-Saxon England (9th century)[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Valhalla Hammer"}}
Name Class Atk Spd Stun Crit Pre Wgt Availability

Spanish Renaissance (15th century)[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Rebellion Hammer"}}
Name Tier Damage Speed Miss Chance Modifiers Requirements

Italian Renaissance (15th century)[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"II Blunt"}}
Name Damage Speed Deflect Cost Availability

Italian Renaissance (16th century)[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Brotherhood Blunt"}}
Name Damage Speed Deflect Cost Availability

Ottoman Empire (16th century)[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Revelations Blunt"}}
Name Damage Speed Deflect Cost Availability

American Revolution[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"III Blunt weapon"}}
Name Damage Speed Combo Cost Availability

French Revolution[edit | edit source]

{{#section:AC:CST/Weapons|"Unity Blunt"}}
Name Level Damage Parry Speed Range Cost Modifiers Availability

Trivia[edit | edit source]

  • In Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood, Ezio can perform pistol executions with blunt weapons, though they use the same animations and sounds as swords did.
  • Picking up brooms or rakes as weapons in Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood allows them to function as blunt weapons and perform certain executions. Killing a guard with a broom grants the Spring Cleaning achievement.
  • In Assassin's Creed: Unity, blunt weapons are classified as "non-lethal" and can never be used to kill an enemy, at most knocking one unconscious. This is in spite of the fact that certain techniques the player character Arno Dorian uses with blunt weapons very clearly crushes an enemy's spine, skull, or chest while some blunt weapons are actually covered in sharp spikes.
    • Rifles in Assassin's Creed: Unity are also classified as "non-lethal" because, when used in melee combat, they function as blunt weapons.

Appearances[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]