Samurai Warriors
戦国無双
A long-running action game series by Koei Tecmo (2004–present) in which players wield real historical Sengoku-period warlords — each with distinct weapons and combat styles — mowing down hundreds of enemies. The series engages deeply with the real blade culture of the era.
解說
Samurai Warriors and Sengoku Sword Culture
Samurai Warriors (Sengoku Musou) was released by Koei Tecmo for PlayStation 2 in 2004 as a sister series to Dynasty Warriors. Set in Japan's Sengoku period (15th–17th centuries), it features dozens of historical warlords, wives, ninjas, and swordsmen, each with unique weapons and special techniques, cutting through massive armies on historical battlefields.
Historical Warlords and Their Weapons
The series carefully grounds each character's weapons in historical or cultural associations: Oda Nobunaga wields a long spear (symbolizing his revolutionary military tactics), Date Masamune fights with sword and wakizashi dual-wield (befitting the 'one-eyed dragon'), Sanada Yukimura carries a cross-shaped jumonji-yari (associated with the Sanada clan), and Uesugi Kenshin wields a great tachi (representing his divine warrior persona). These weapon choices drive real historical curiosity.
Swords, Spears, and Naginata: The Full Arsenal
Samurai Warriors addresses the full Sengoku weapons system — sword, spear, naginata, bow, rifle, and more — accurately reflecting that the spear was often the primary battlefield weapon while the sword served for close combat and finishing blows. This diversity promotes a broader understanding of Japanese blade culture beyond the katana alone.
Educational and Cultural Impact
The series has been instrumental in spreading awareness of Sengoku history, battles (Sekigahara, Osaka, Honnoji), and the weapons culture of the era to millions of players across Asia, North America, and Europe. Koei Tecmo's historical action games as a franchise have become one of the most important global vectors for Japanese and East Asian historical sword culture.
登場的真實刀劍
Date Masamune's Swords (Including Shokudaikiri Mitsutada)
Date Masamune, depicted as a dual-sword fighter in Samurai Warriors, was historically a dedicated sword collector. His most famous blade, Shokudaikiri Mitsutada (Bizen Osafune Mitsutada), is preserved at the Tokugawa Museum and is also celebrated in Touken Ranbu. Samurai Warriors' portrayal of Masamune has driven real-world visits to museums housing his historical blades.
Sanada Yukimura's Cross-Spear (Jumonji-yari)
The cross-shaped jumonji-yari associated with Sanada Yukimura in Samurai Warriors is a real spear type with a cross-shaped blade, historically connected to the Sanada clan. Spear tips were forged by sword smiths using the same tamahagane and fold-forging techniques as swords, making spear culture an inseparable part of Japanese blade heritage. Relevant artifacts are preserved at Ueda Castle museums in Nagano Prefecture.
瀏覽真正的日本刀
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