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1->''"If a minifig can't find a real weapon, Random Objects are better than nothing, although this is only because having nothing sucks to such an impressive degree."''
2-->-- ''TabletopGame/{{Brikwars}} Manual'' on what to do when disarmed
3!!Board Games
4* ''TabletopGame/TheAwfulGreenThingsFromOuterSpace'': When battling the eponymous Things, most of the potential weapons available to the crew of the spaceship Znutar fall into this category; the only things that were originally designed to be weapons are Stun Pistols and Gas Grenades.
5* ''TabletopGame/{{Clue}}'': The potential murder weapons include a pipe, a candlestick and a wrench.
6
7!!Card Games
8* ''TabletopGame/KungFuFighting'': Some of the weapons available include [[ParasolOfPain an umbrella]], [[ChairmanOfTheBrawl a chair, and a table]].
9* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'':
10** [[https://scryfall.com/card/ddq/32/sharpened-pitchfork Sharpened Pitchfork]] is an Equipment card depicting a common farm tool sharpened to serve as a weapon.
11--->''Not everyone can have a sword of blessed silver. Not everyone needs one, either.''
12** In [[https://scryfall.com/card/mic/150/gisa-and-geralf their shared card]], Geralf makes do with a pitchfork to fend off Emrakul's brood, while Gisa sticks to her trusty shovel.
13* ''TabletopGame/StarRealms'': Inverted with the Cargo Launch ship. It was originally developed as a combat drone, the Star Empire used it for hauling cargo instead. Which is a surprise, as the Empire faction tends to focus mostly on combat.
14
15!!Role-Playing Games
16* ''TabletopGame/SeventhSea'' features a school of fencing dedicated to the use of improvised weapons. Note that it doesn't give any advantage to combat with ''real'' weapons. Rather, at a low rank it allows the fencer to wield anything as if it were a weapon -- anything at all. More amusingly, at higher ranks the character can become ''more dangerous'' [[RuleOfCool with a broken bottle than he would be with a sword.]]
17* ''TabletopGame/AlienTheRoleplayingGame'': Unless the players are Colonial Marines, odds are that they won't all be armed and yet find themselves desperately in need of protection. However, there are plenty of commonly used tools which can be repurposed into weaponry in a pinch: cutting torches for emergency ingress through bulkheads or carving up scrap metal, bolt guns used to apply self-expanding bolts for securing patches over hull breaches, long maintenance jacks for manually overriding sealed airlocks with mechanical leverage, harpoon launchers for latching together otherwise uncontrolled objects in free-fall, etc. They're unlikely to make a determined xenomorph do more than be a little more careful about when it engages, but they're still better than going up against one completely unarmed.
18* ''TabletopGame/CallOfCthulhu'': A staple, given that most characters aren't fighters by nature. Statistics have been published over the years for "weapons" as diverse as cricket bats, awls, kitchen knives, rocks, live wires, hatchets, steel-toed boots, fire extinguishers and staircases (pushing enemies down them). The sample given for how combat functions in some editions shows Harvey Walters taking down a burglar with a leg broken off of a chair.
19* ''TabletopGame/ChroniclesOfDarkness'': Improvised weapons subtract a [[MediaNotes/{{Dice}} die]] from the dice pool, and another if you have less Strength than the object has Size. Improvised weapons take as much damage as they inflict. The base game also has a Fighting Style revolving around obtaining and exploiting improvised weaponry, which is incompatible with the examples below.
20** ''TabletopGame/BeastThePrimordial'': The Cyclopean Strength Atavism multiplies a Beast's lifting capacity. At Low Satiety, the Beast can swing or throw anything he can lift.
21** ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheLost'' has the [[GladiatorGames Bloodbrute]] Kith, who gain the ability to fashion anything they find into a crude weapon. The book mentions an Ogre ripping a stop sign out of the ground and fashioning it into a great axe as one example.
22** ''TabletopGame/PrometheanTheCreated'': Golems can gain the ability to double or ''triple'' their (usually already formidable) Strength for the purposes of lifting -- taking them into the realm of picking up I-beams, trucks, or 16-ton weights. An upgrade to that ability lets them swing or even ''throw'' these massive objects without penalty, with predictable results.
23* ''TabletopGame/D20Modern'': In the Urban Arcana setting there is an advanced class called the Street Warrior that gains proficiency with improvised weapons and at later levels can do extra damage as if it were a size category larger.
24* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
25** A prestige class in 3.5 edition, the Drunken Master, has the special ability to use any improvised weapon, but deal damage as if he were attacking with a Monk's unarmed strike (At the Monk level when this ability is possible, you may be dealing 1d10 damage with fists; the improvised weapon damage die is 1d4). This ability has one caveat; It is only active when the character is drunk. A secondary ability of the Drunken Master is to be able to drink a pint as a move action.
26** The ''Complete Warrior'' splatbook sort-of creates the ability to treat specific improvised weapons as Exotic Weapons (one of the Prestige Classes includes Exotic Weapon Proficiency -- Manacles as a bonus Feat for a Class Feature). The back of the book also includes rules for improvised weapons such as table legs and barrels, giving rules for transmuting weight of the object into damage dice, and specifying that sharp objects deal ''double'' damage. Exotic Weapon Proficiency -- Boat Anchor has never looked quite so fearsome.
27** In 4th edition, the Arena Fighter can use anything as an improvised weapon with a fair degree of skill. There's also the Belt of the Brawler, which allows the wearer to use any improvised weapon as though it were a club. Combine that with the Iron Soul Monk and you're basically Creator/JackieChan in a ladder factory.
28** In 5e, there's the Tavern Brawler feat, which grants proficiency with Improvised Weapons (improved odds of hitting) and lets one do d4 plus strength modifier damage with an unarmed attack, instead of the usual 1 plus strength modifier. Also, in many cases, an improvised weapon that is similar to an actual weapon can be treated as such -- like a table leg being compared to a club -- and a DM may allow the character to have proficiency based on that, otherwise it does d4 damage. Also, ''anything'' can be used as a weapon -- broken glass, a table leg, a frying pan, a wagon wheel, or a dead goblin.
29* ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'':
30** In 2nd ed, the core rulebook's set of Exalted, the Solars, have their titular martial arts style, Solar Hero Style, have a minor focus on improvised weapons. The Lunar Exalted are much, much worse. Not in Lunar Hero Style, but because anything they can pick up, they can make a perfect attack with using one of their Charms (a perfect attack just hits, unless you use a perfect defense to stop it). Including doing so with improvised versions of weapons they have absolutely no idea how to actually ''use'' in the first place. For Full Moon Lunars under their anima effect, this includes picking up decent-sized buildings and hurling them so very hard that the attack is unblockable and undodgable. Or as a melee weapon. Or, if you have a ballista on hand, ''as a ballista bolt'', even if you don't know the first thing about siege artillery.
31** A good chunk of the Exalted types get Melee and Thrown Charms. Under the right circumstances, these can apply to dessert forks and fruit. Similarly, the Sidereal Exalted get an Archery Charm that allows them to turn anything shorter than their arm -- such as a table leg, a handful of sand, or ''a shout'' -- into an arrow, granting that arrow properties of the material you used (you aim for someone's face with a sand arrow, they're gonna be blinded).
32** ''The Heaven's Ladder style'' was supossed to come for 3e (it didn't make it into the corebook but maybe later) is all about figthing whit a handladder.
33* ''TabletopGame/{{Fellowship}}'': An Orc can use the "Fires of Industry" move to break something and fashion it into a weapon. It normally takes a minute's preparation, but Sons of War Orcs can do it in the heat of battle.
34* ''TabletopGame/FengShui'': The Everyman Hero character type gets a bonus when fighting with ''any'' improvised weapon.
35* ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}'' has the normal sort of improvised weapon rules, and...
36** ''GURPS Powers'' spends two whole pages on the effects of using improvised weapons that are bigger than you are (like cars, or I-beams).
37** In the ''Dungeon Fantasy'' setting, Ninjas can temporarily make improvised weapons just as effective as proper weapons. Innkeepers, meanwhile, get access to such weapons as mops and the FryingPanOfDoom by default.
38** The "Improvised Weapons" perk lets a character eliminate penalties for using improvised weapons with one specified skill.
39* ''TabletopGame/HeroSystem'': The weapon charts in ''Post-Apocalyptic Hero'' include such items as parking meter maces and "swords" made by sharpening the edge of a traffic sign pole. Well, it ''is'' post-apoc.
40* ''TabletopGame/InNomine'': Malakim of Creation (and any other Angel with their Choir Attunement) explicitly have the ability to pick up anything and use it as a weapon, the effectiveness determined by their stats rather than the object in question, the explanation being that "they fight creatively." Naturally, this leads to plenty of OnceKilledAManWithANoodleImplement.
41* ''TabletopGame/MutantsAndMasterminds'' includes rules for improvised weapons, as well as a couple of feats to make them more effective. However, a super-strong character is likely to destroy whatever they were holding after a swing or two.
42* ''TabletopGame/NinjasAndSuperspies'': There's a martial art focused around the ability to turn anything you can pick up into an effective improvised weapon.
43* ''TabletopGame/{{Paranoia}}'': Bouncy Bubble Beverage cans explode if you shake them enough, making them popular among citizens not cleared to use actual grenades. (And Alpha Complex being what it is, the BBB cans tend to be more reliable and effective than any official grenades a character may acquire.)
44* ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'' takes improvised weaponry to a whole new level with decent damage dealt with improvised weapons in general (based on their size compared to actual weapons), rather easily accessed feats to remove attack penalies when using improvised weapons, and a lot of classes have archetypes that give some of these feats for free with other benefits. One notable example is the Makeshift Scrapper, a modified Rogue who forgoes trap detection to focus on fighting with anything available, even getting bonuses on attack rolls with improvised weapons rather than penalties. Another is the Extemporaneous Channeler, an Occultist that can use their focus on improvised weapons to temporarily imbue them with any combination of magical effects allowed by their level.
45* ''TabletopGame/RocketAge'': Every native Iote weapon and device is an improvised weapon, made from whatever scrap they were able to find. Don't laugh though, their zip guns, crossbows and slingshots will end you if you underestimate them. Io might have the lowest technology level of the entire solar system, but the Iotes have more natural technical aptitude than practically anyone else.
46* ''TabletopGame/{{Scion}}'': A character with sufficient Epic Strength can use anything ranging from a motorcycle to a nuclear aircraft carrier as such.
47* ''TabletopGame/SentinelsOfTheMultiverse'': Mr. Fixer, an aging mechanic who was the best martial artist in the setting in his prime, uses them as his only weapons. [[WrenchWhack Pipe wrenches]], [[ThrowingYourSwordAlwaysWorks tire irons]], jack handles, grease guns... If it's a tool that's useful in a machine shop, he can hit people with it to great effect.
48* ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}'': In 3e, anything you pick up will almost invariably be superior to fighting unarmed. Indeed, the improvised weapons table has rules for [[GrievousHarmWithABody wielding another person as a weapon]].
49* ''TabletopGame/StarblazerAdventures'':
50** The "Whatever's on Hand" stunt allows the use of the Fists skill when fighting with improvised weapons.
51** The "Anything Goes" stunt allows the use of any kind of improvised weapon without penalties.
52* ''TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasyRoleplay'': [[AllSwordsAreTheSame All improvised weapons are lumped together in the same category]]. In early editions, picking up an improvised weapon is more or less pointless as they do the same damage as an unarmed attack, and the only benefit is that armour points aren't doubled against the attack. However, double armour points don't apply if you have the Street Fighting talent, which also increases unarmed damage -- so effectively, with this talent, you do more damage by punching somebody in the face than by hitting them over the head with an iron bar. In 4th Edition, this is averted, both by intrinsic mechanics and by allowing things like crowbars and sickles to count as hand weapons, but there's also a talent which makes you more effective at knocking people out with improvised weapons.
53
54!!War Games
55* ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'' has rules to allow the 'Mechs to pick up arms and limbs that have been shot off other 'Mecha (although, there's nothing stopping a 'Mech using its ''own'' amputated leg, come to that).
56** If your 'Mech has hands and is in a forest hex -- hey, insta-club! Sure, it's only good for one use, but they're like Doritos: crunch all you want, they'll make more.
57** There's also the option for an Assault class 'Mech to even use a lighter 'Mech as a melee weapon, in the HumongousMecha version of GrievousHarmWithABody.
58** If you are so inclined, and have [[JumpJetPack jump jets]], you can pull off a [[DeathFromAbove "Death From Above"]] [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin maneuver]], deliberately landing on top of another 'Mech ''[[GoombaStomp really, really hard.]]''
59* ''TabletopGame/{{Brikwars}}'': In lieu of weapons, figures can use random objects as offensive tools. They aren't good options, but being unarmed is worse.
60* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'':
61** In melee, Giants tend to wield whatever's handy, such as a tree with a few swords driven through it. The Bonebreaker Giant's artwork in ''Storm of Magic'' shows it holding a trebuchet's counterweight as an improvised flail.
62** At range, the Ogres have a fine line in stuffing scrap into Leadbelcher cannons, and the first war machine they had, the Gnoblar Scraplauncher, consists of a collection of weapons too small for Ogres but too large for Gnoblars, dumped into a trebuchet arrangement and fired. The Scraplauncher goes so far as to have the Killing Blow special rule, to represent the chance of one of the swords landing point first.
63** Gnoblars fight with whatever objects they can get their hands on on short notice, and as such Gnoblar mobs are typically seen going to battle wielding ragtag assortments of spear tips, rusted daggers, wooden legs, animal teeth, broken bottles, pointy sticks and the like. Their missile weapons likewise consist of whatever heavy, sharp or prickly things they can scrounge up in a hurry — rocks, sharpened horseshoes, hedgehogs and so on.
64* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
65** The Orks have their entire civilisation based around this (and getting MoreDakka). Everything is improvised, and that ''everything'' is a weapon.
66** An Imperial assassin of the [[PsychoForHire Eversor]] temple was once assigned to eliminate a planetary governor and his family after it was discovered that the colonial leader was financing pirate raids against his neighbors. Attacking during a family festival, the assassin ended up butchering all three hundred and seventeen members of the governor's clan, ages ranging from one hundred and forty-two to [[WouldHurtAChild three weeks old]], though he had to resort to using a silver soup spoon and a butter knife before he was finished.
67** A particularly inventive Drukhari Wych known as "Steel Fang" is legendary for using absolutely anything to eliminate her enemies. Crowning examples are shattering a statue of Khaine and using the shards to shank the entire Inner Council of Craftworld Lugganth, and killing an [[SnakePeople Elder Sslyth]] in a Commorragh arena with ''dust'' (blinding it with a handful, then choking it to death on the stuff).
68** The annihilator pattern of the Predator tank originated as this, ironically. It was the result of a long ranged long fang assault against a group of chaos space marines, where they were unable to get in range with their lascannons, and the predator destructor they had at hand were not an effective enough tank-hunting weapon. So what do they do? Rip out the weapons of the tank and link their lascannons there instead! While the [[MachineWorship Adeptus Mechanicus]] were enraged at even thinking of modifying their tanks, the pattern soon grew in popularity, and soon became one of the most popular predator patterns in the 41st millenium once other chapters started copying this idea.
69** The Apocalypse datasheet for the Land Raider Ares has a backstory a bit like this. The Dark Angels were bogged down in siege warfare in an attempt to capture three of the Fallen (traitorous Dark Angels), and they had the techpriests build them a weapon designed to penetrate the rubble-strewn defenses. A day after the Areses were deployed, with their heavy flamethrowers, epic machine guns, and massive short-ranged artillery weapon, the enemy surrendered.
70** In a similar vein, the Stormsword and Stormblade variants of the Shadowsword were made as "improvised" variants of the famous tank. The Stormsword was made when a Shadowsword tank had it's Volcano Cannon destroyed and was rendered ineffective in an urban combat situation, so the tech priest jury-rigged the powerful Hellhammer Siege Cannon in place of the Volcano Cannon, which turned out to be exceptionally useful in urban combat situations and causing it to be elevated into an official variant after the conflict. The Stormblade was made in response to a number of Forge Worlds that were not in favour with Mars (the seat of the Adeptus Mechanicus) not being allowed access to the Shadowsword's Volcano cannon, and so Forge World Ryza (a Forge World known for it's mastery of plasma technologies) mounted a massive Plasma Blast Gun onto the Shadowsword's frame and distributing it to the less favourable Forge Worlds as an alternative to the Shadowsword.
71** The battery pack for the ubiquitous Lasgun can be heated in an open flame to overcharge it and thrown as an impromptu grenade. However this is discouraged as 1.) the battery pack is infinitely rechargable and can use something as simple as sunlight, so it's usually a better idea to use it for it's intended purpose as a gun magazine and 2.) it is considered destroying imperial property and the [[DisproportionateRetribution Imperium does not look kindly upon destroying their property.]]
72** The Genestealer Cults' weapons and vehicles are typically mining equipment appropriated for use in the battlefield. Similarly, one Aberrant model uses a road sign torn from the ground (with the concrete still stuck to the base) as a blunt instrument.
73** ''TabletopGame/{{Necromunda}}'': There's a grappling hook that "is not really a weapon, but it's inevitable that someone will want to use it as one." It's the same strength as a normal gun.

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