
Estoc (5e Equipment) - D&D Wiki
The estoc was a variation of the longsword designed for fighting against mail or plate armor. It was long, straight and stiff with no cutting edge, just a point. Blade cross-sections can be triangular, square, rhomboid or flat hexagonal.
Estoc - d20PFSRD
An estoc is a sword about as long as a bastard sword, but designed exclusively for thrusting attacks. Its “blade” is a steel spike with a triangular, square, or hexagonal cross-section. Like the bastard sword, an estoc requires special training to use it one handed, but it can also be wielded as a two-handed martial weapon.
The Estoc in D&D : r/DnD - Reddit
Sep 30, 2020 · An estoc is not that much larger than a rapier. the blade of an estoc is the same length as a ful rapier and had the hilt of a longsword. Rapiers on average weigh 2.2 pounds, with about 70% of the weight in the hilt and guard.
Real Steel: The Estoc - Kobold Press
Oct 28, 2022 · The estoc is the grandfather of the rapier. It is an edgeless thrusting sword designed for piercing armor. It gains a +2 bonus to attacks against opponents in any kind of mail, and a +1 bonus to attacks against opponents in any kind of plate armor.
Rapiers vs Estocs/Tucks : r/SWORDS - Reddit
Oct 5, 2017 · Rapiers have for the most part "normal" sword blades which are relatively narrow and thick but still capable of cutting. Estocs are pretty much a spike, usually with a square cross section, so there's no way to cut with them, it's just a very …
Estoc (3.5e Equipment) - Dungeons and Dragons Wiki - dnd …
Built like a rapier, but as long as a longsword. It's much more rigid and stiff, but its length and grip makes it excel at thrusting attacks. The estoc excels at long poking attacks. As a standard action you can make a single attack with an additional +5 …
Would an estoc count as a longsword or rapier in 5e?
Estoc is essentially a thrust only weapon, where a long sword was used much more for swinging. An estoc was used more like a spear than a long sword. I wouldn't say it's not very different from a rapier, in comparison to a longsword.
Two-handed Finesse Weapon? - General Discussion - D&D
Jun 21, 2021 · The estoc is, after all, a historical two-handed weapon made exclusively for thrusting that somewhat preceded the rapier (for what I can remember). Summarizing, I'd give the longsword a property like "agile": the weapon has the finesse property when two-handed.
The Estoc - Ultanya
Jan 23, 2018 · The Estoc, also dubbed the Tuck or Panzerstecher, is a two-handed thrusting sword, from the 14th-17th centuries. To this day the Estoc is often mistaken for a long sword or rapier. This was a weapon made to defeat opponents wearing heavy armor. The blade normally had no edge and was designed to deliver terrible stabbing wounds.
Weapons - 5th Edition SRD
Jun 1, 2010 · Estoc. A hand-and-a-half sword designed to pierce heavy armor and sharpened only on the tip, an estoc is 4 feet long, sometimes with a second crossguard. It is said to have been used first against the elves, but now is used by dwarven mercenaries and human knights who expect to fight other heavily armored warriors. Its anti-armor properties ...
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