Iaijutsu Practitioner (original) (raw)

Iaijutsu Practitioner (trope)

Draw.

"Swords are made to return to their scabbards."

Katanas Are Just Better, or so they say. Slightly less well-known is that the Quick Draw is pretty damn awesome in its own way. If you find a person who is good at combining them, then you have an Iaijutsu Practitioner.

The Japanese term 居合 (Iai) originally meant a "sit-off" with a warrior reaching for their sword from a sitting/kneeling position, but is often used in a looser sense. Iaijutsu (Iai techniques) consist of swiftly drawing a sword and attacking in one fluid motion (possibly with follow-up slashes), then swiping the blade off and re-sheathing it. Related terms include Iaidō,note "The Way of Iai", the more formal/spiritual version Iainuki,note "iai display" Battōjutsu,note "unsheathing techniques"; typically focused on attack power rather than self-defense and Battōdō.note "The Way of Unsheathing"; training the spirit by swiftly cutting objects in half However, compared to other fields of Japanese martial arts the actual boundaries between all these are rather muddy, and can vary depending on who you ask.

Although usually associated with Japanese swordsmanship, there are similar western versions for cavalry sabers. Another variant dates back to Italian swordmaster Fiore de'i Liberi, who taught swordsmen how to block weapons with a sheathed sword and then dual wield the scabbard and blade for powerful combo attacks.

The use of a weaponized draw makes sense as a reaction to a surprise attack, or if a character avoids drawing his sword until the opponent attacks so he can claim self-defense. Rule of Cool kicks in if a swordsman refuses to draw his sword ahead of time in open battle, since the sword can be used more quickly and in a greater number of ways if it’s already drawn. Even sillier is when an Iaijutsu practitioner goes through a battle repeatedly sheathing his sword so that he can use the cut from the scabbard on every single enemy, despite this being a huge waste of effort and dangerously predictable. That could be justified, however, if the scabbard has some special ability to charge up the sword with energy, or increase the power of the cut by shooting the blade out at high speed.

Users of this trope can often create Sword Beams, or just strike and re-sheathe so fast that it looks like a Sword Beam.

See also: Quick Draw, Single-Stroke Battle, One-Hit Kill.


Examples:

open/close all folders

Anime & Manga

Fan Works

Films — Live-Action

Gamebooks

Literature

Live-Action TV

Tabletop Games

Video Games

Web Animation

Webcomics

Western Animation

Real Life