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- martial arts! -- every character is trained in martial arts! Its like a requirement for capsuleer academy or something. I focused on Gottii's "ancient martial traditions" cus thats like, the very basic Brutor write up. All the strip mall ninjas in EVE RP kinda take away from Brutor culture, imho
Really? I figured it was reasonable for Arnulf because he graduated from one of the military schools. Maybe it's more the practitioners who do it for self-discipline and fitness benefits (like him) and characters that are supposed to be out-of-capsule tough?
Also, I think there are more bloodlines than the Brutor with a warrior culture. The Khanid come to mind for one.
Almost
every character practices "martial arts" on some level, or adds it to their culture/background. Literally to the point were its rare when someone isnt trained in martial arts.
Which is fine, but, when I decided to RP and play my main as an RP character (needless to say "Gottii" wasnt originally an RP name), I looked at the Brutor backstory, and said "ok, cool, they're a warrior culture, train in it since birth, martial arts and physical prowess are important to them..."
Then, you start RPing.... (exaggerated)
Caldari 1: "So, tell me of your people brutor!"
Amarr 1: "Speak heathen, we wish to know!"
Gallente 1: "I find your traditions so quaint and interesting!"
Brutor: "Um, well, we're a martial based people, we practice our martial traditions since childhood, and we..."
Gallente: "OMG, we do that too! I've been trained in ancient Jin-mei arts since I was a child! Its been our traditions since forever! We should spar or something!
Brutor: "Really? Wow, okay, I guess we share that...I didnt know..."
Caldari: "Weak Gallente know nothing about martial arts. I've been trained in deadly Civire arts since I was a child. Its an ingrained part of our very life! We're widely regarded as the best"
Brutor: "Wow, uhh, I thought the Caldari didnt value esoteric arts?
Caldari: "Nonsense. Martial arts are central to our life, Im an expert at it."
Amarr: "Ignore these fools! I've been trained in the ways of martial excellence by my Houses very best martial teachers since I was a small child! It is the tradition in our House to emphasize such things! We are feared the Cluster over!"
Amarr: "But enough about us, tell us more of your people..."
Brutor: "Well, uhh, its kinda like what ya'll do, but...well, without the yanno, Amarr, Caldari or Gallente bits."
Im exaggerating, but everyone having that background kinda leaves you with very little thats distinctive or defining in Brutor culture. Do Brutor have a monopoly on such things? Of course not. But the write up on the Brutor would seem to imply that a focus on martial traditions and physical training is rare and unique enough to be distinctive, its their "thing". But it can be frustrating when your distinctive racial background is pretty much the norm for every other PC you run into.
Again, before Im flamed, nothing wrong with characters of other bloodlines and background practicing martial traditions, etc. Its just that its become so watered down that its hard to create a Brutor background that doesnt seem watered down in return.
Re: Martial arts and the military.
I can promise you this.
The military couldn't really care less about teaching its people martial arts, at least the ancient, comprehensive kinds.
Yes, even the high end soldiers. Its a labor intensive skill that has very little battlefield application in todays day and age. They dont like to say it, but guys like SEALS or SAS members or whatever arent really trained all that much in martial arts per se, theyre trained in a couple basic hand to hand techniques before moving on to more meaningful skills (marksmanship, insertion techniques, comms use, foreign language, explosives, or any one of the vast number of other skills they need).
In fact, in CQB, theyre trained
not to fight per se. You either shoot them, or ram the barrel of your gun into their skull, or yell at them to drop their weapons and surrender (maybe, maybe stab them with a knife if theyre cowboys). Thats about it. Punching or kicking or ju-jitsu wrestling or whatever takes too long, and will get your squadies killed.
Keep in mind that in most cases to teach a traditional martial art takes a long time, and a lot of effort. The military only has its high end soldiers for a relatively short amount of time before they retire/go nuts from PTSD/die/body gives out, etc. The military wants to teach the skills that give the best bang for their buck on the battlefield. Teaching roundhouses and joint locks isnt exactly the most efficient use of a soldiers limited training life.
Does this mean your typical guy who trains at the MMA gym can take say a SEAL or Israeli commando in a fight? Of course not. A typical spec ops soldier is a naturally aggressive exceptional athlete who's completely emotionally at ease inflicting grievous bodily harm upon another human being. They would thrash the typical civilian "martial artist", simply because most people, even trained ring fighters, arent really at ease going from 0 to "ram a finger in your eye socket and literally pull out your eyeball" in .6 secs. Truly elite soldiers are, and that matters far more in highly stressful life or death situations where most fine body control disappears anyway.
They dont engage in "social violence" like a bar fight, they're there to kill.
Sure, many soldiers are trained in 6 month set hand-to-hand courses, but thats not what most people think of when they think of "martial arts". The reason why military-based martial arts are occasionally in vogue is because they taught a basic and effective set of combat skills in a relatively short amount of time. But, again, they're primal and basic and in many cases more a morale boosting exercise.
Sure, say like the U.S. Marines teach its members a punch, a kick, and a couple throws over the span of a few months, but no serious trainer would say they're "trained" after all of that. Many high end soldiers practice some kind of martial arts as a hobby (generally learned before they joined up), and some units encourage it for cultural reasons (south korean commandos come to mind), but its hardly universal, or really necessary.
Are there some high end civilian martial artists who could beat say a typical commando in a straight up fist fight? Sure, but they're very, very rare. But learning to punch, kick, use a sword, etc has so little to do with the modern battlefield that soldiers are far better off learning other more important, less time and labor intensive skills, and generally they do.