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1%% Image kept on page per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1591461785030157300
2%% Please do not replace or remove without starting a new thread.
3%%
4[[quoteright:350:[[VideoGame/SoulSeries https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/carry_a_big_stick.jpg]]]]
5[[caption-width-right:350:[[UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt Speaking softly]] is optional.]]
6%%
7->''"To be honest, all you need to use is, at '''best''', a big heavy object. I stick to the axes because that's my style, but I was halfway tempted to just find a big piece of tree."''
8-->-- '''Byron the Berserker''' of ''Webcomic/GuildedAge'', on the subject of [[http://guildedage.net/comic/chapter-1-page-11/ dealing with kobolds]]
9
10Perhaps the first weapon of war that humanity has mastered (besides their [[GoodOldFisticuffs own two fists]]), the good old-fashioned club simply consists of picking up a stick (or [[BadWithTheBone bone]]) and whacking something with it. Though the quality of these clubs has advanced over time, from crudely carved pieces of wood to the finely-made flanged mace, the general principle of bashing something over the head remains. A [[CoolSword sword]] isn't [[{{Pun}} cut]] out for slicing through heavy armor, but a well-designed bludgeoning tool will leave a sizeable dent and break any bones underneath. Do not underestimate the simple stick.
11
12Nowadays, maces and clubs tend to find use with two main groups of warriors; big, powerful bruisers like TheBigGuy or the MightyGlacier, or TechnicalPacifist types like HighFantasy [[ReligiousBruiser priests and clerics]] who want something for [[HammerOfTheHoly self-defense without shedding blood]] (though anyone who has seen one of these in action knows that these weapons, particularly the heavier ones, are just as capable as bladed weapons of leaving a bloody mess, not to mention all the damage the force does to internal organs).
13
14The hammer is probably the most popular form of bludgeon in fiction. Compare the more finesse-oriented MartialArtsStaff and the improvised BatterUp, CrowbarCombatant, and RollingPinOfDoom for other types of clubbing weapons, as well as PrimitiveClubs for when the use of these weapons is used to denote primitiveness and unsophistication. For literal cases of a [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin ''big stick'']], often used as a pole-arm, see TelephonePolearm. [[SavageSpikedWeapons Spiked maceheads are very common for more violent characters to emphasize their brutality]]. Combine it with an whip and you get an EpicFlail. PipePain is a common way of improvising a big stick in modern times, as well as TwoByFore, in which the bludgeoning weapon is a wooden board/plank or any kind of wooden construction material. A common modern version of the big stick is the LawmanBaton.
15
16Not to be confused with GunboatDiplomacy, which is a ''metaphorical'' Big Stick, which TropeNamer UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt meant in his Big stick ideology.
17----
18!!Examples:
19[[foldercontrol]]
20
21[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
22* The Apostle Wyald of ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'' wields a wood club and when he goes OneWingedAngel he uses ''entire trees'' as clubs.
23* In ''Manga/Brave10'', [[WarriorMonk Seikai]] is TheBigGuy of the Braves and carries a massive metal club.
24* Goku from the ''Manga/DragonBall'' weapon of choice when he was a child was his [[TelescopingStaff Power Pole, a stick that could extend to unimaginable lengths]]. Fitting since Goku was [[MonkeyKingLite based]] [[{{Expy}} off of]] Sun Wukong and the Power Pole off the Monkey King's famous golden staff from ''Literature/JourneyToTheWest''.
25* ''Manga/{{Gamaran}}'': The [[WeaponSpecialization weapon of choice]] of Ryuho Kibe the Silver Demon is about 8 and a half feet long, has sharp spikes on the edges, and is formally called "[[{{BFS}} Giant Steel Sword]]: [[ICallItVera Kokusosou (Black Clawed Comb)]]. To cap it all, due to his immense physical strength, Ryuho is capable of wielding the thing with only one hand should he wish or need so. It is realistically treated as a OneHitKill weapon. The sequel series ''Gamaran Shura'' has Bihoumaru, whose weapon of choice besides fists is a Chinese melon hammer he can use to hit the ground hard enough to crack the soil open and summon a massive amount of dust.
26* ''Literature/GoblinSlayer'': After losing his sword during a monster-hunting quest in the sewers, Rookie Warrior starts using a wooden club at Goblin Slayer's suggestion, seeing as it is cheaper, more versatile, easier to use and just as easily replaced if broken. Even after getting his sword back, he ends up liking the club so much that, even a year later, he still uses it just as much as the sword. He eventually gets retitled as "Club Fighter" because of how much he uses it.
27* ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamIronBloodedOrphans'':
28** Protagonist Mikazuki favors enormous, heavy bludgeoning weapons. His Gundam Barbatos starts out with a gigantic mace with concealed pile-driver, then upgrades to the "wrench mace," which can open up to grab an enemy machine (and cut them up with internal chainsaws). In the second season Barbatos Lupus has a "sword mace" (essentially a blunt-edged {{BFS}}) and a pair of smaller one-handed maces before its final upgrade, the Lupus Rex, gets an '''even bigger''' version of the original's mace (and please note: these weapons are oversized even by HumongousMecha standards). He's carried guns and a katana as well, but he seems to prefer simply crushing foes with giant hunks of metal.
29** Kudal, the original pilot of the Gundam Gusion, used a huge, rocket-propelled sledgehammer. When Akihiro gets the Gusion, he ditches this in favor of more traditional weaponry.
30* ''Manga/MyHime'': Haruka wields a big honkin' mace, which also shoots [[PersonalityPowers beams of light]].
31* [[{{Oni}} Ogremon]] from ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' fights with a bone club.
32* ''Manga/OnePiece'':
33** "Iron Club" Alvida is given her title for the massive spiked metal club she brings into battle. Even after [[FormerlyFat losing all of her fat]] with the Slip-Slip Fruit, [[MusclesAreMeaningless she can swing her club around just as effectively]].
34** Enel carries a gold staff that he can use as a bludgeoning weapon and a conduit for his [[ShockAndAwe lightning powers]]. He can also use those powers to reshape it into a trident.
35** Oimo swings a club with great force; he's a giant, after all, and the club is correspondingly massive.
36** Kaidou and his child Yamato, in conjunction with their Oni theme, both use spiked kanabos. And they can use Haki to make their strikes extremely powerful and bypass Devil Fruit immunities.
37* ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'': Shampoo's chúi. They're an obscure Chinese mace that looks like a basketball on a shortstaff, but despite being brightly painted, the head is made of ''solid steel''.
38* ''Literature/{{Slayers}}'': Filia, the gold dragon, carries in her human form a black morning star.
39* ''Literature/SwordArtOnline'': Rika Shinozaki, a.k.a. Lisbeth wields a mace as her weapon of choice while playing [=VRMMORPGs=].
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Comic Books]]
43* ''ComicBook/BlueBeetle'': "I'm Paco. And I am going to hit you with this stick until you get the #@%$ off my planet."
44* [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Hogun]] is almost always armed with a morning star.
45* Maces are one of the preferred weapon types of the [[ComicBook/{{Hawkman}} Hawk Family]].
46* Cindy of ''ComicBook/CindyAndBiscuit'' loves beating monsters to death with tree branches. It's made explicit that most of the sticks only last for one fight.
47* In Titan Comics ''Hercules - The Wrath of Heaven'', after dismantling the Nemean Lion robot, the half-alien demigod Hercules has its {{Nigh Invulnerab|ility}}le exoskeleton made into armor for him. Hercules also has some of its plated spine made into a somewhat bladed mace.
48* Meanwhile ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules'' has the Golden Mace which is a weapon made of adamantite and really lets Hercules take advantage of his Class 100 strength.
49* Continuing with the Hercules theme, ''ComicBook/HerculesTheThracianWars'' has a spiked club to smack Greek heads.
50* While DC's ComicBook/HerculesUnbound generally fights empty-handed in the modern age, flashbacks in ''Franchise/WonderWoman'' and situations where he feels the need for a force multiplier prove that his preferred weapon is a club.
51* Ever since her introduction in ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1942'', Giganta has preferred a large club or similar bashing weapon.
52* ''ComicBook/NewGods'': Kalibak uses the Beta Club, a metal club designed by [[TortureTechnician DeSaad]]. The Beta Club can fire [[BoomStick force bolts]] or [[AgonyBeam nerve beams]].
53* ''ComicBook/TheMightyThor'': After Mjölnir was returned to the original Thor, Eric Masterson used an enchanted mace called Thunderstrike.
54* ''ComicBook/{{Invincible}}'': Both [[WonderWomanWannabe War Woman]] and [[BloodKnight Battle Beast]] fight with maces.
55[[/folder]]
56
57[[folder:Fan Works]]
58* ''Fanfic/KitsuneNoKenFistOfTheFox'': Tenten wields [[DualWielding two morning-star clubs]] for her first fight with Naruto.
59* ''Fanfic/RobbReturns'' has the Fist of Winter, a mace made of sky metal and obsidian spikes [[spoiler:and the Starks' weapon before they got Ice]]. Domeric Bolton sees that it is not a weapon of chivalry, but a weapon of death.
60* ''Fanfic/UnderTheNorthernLights'': The [[OurTrollsAreDifferent stalu]] Kvalhissir keeps a huge mace which looks like a small tree whose roots grab a huge rock.
61[[/folder]]
62
63[[folder:Films]]
64* ''Film/CrouchingTigerHiddenDragon'': During the fight scene between Jen, using the famed Green Destiny sword, and Shu Lien, going through all the weapons on her WallOfWeapons, Shu Lien grabs a very large cudgel and starts to make a straight run at Jen who backs up at the sheer size of the thing...until the cudgel proves ''too'' large and its sheer weight pulls Shu Lien backwards until its head rests on the floor. Shu Lien has to drop it and get another weapon.
65* In ''Film/EvenLambsHaveTeeth'', Sloane and Katie murder Boris by wrapping a massive tree branch in barbed wire and nails, and [[AssShove shoving it up his ass]].
66* Vultan fights with a mace in ''Film/{{Flash Gordon|1980}}''.
67* In Creator/KennethBranagh's ''Film/{{Henry V|1989}}'' the Duke of Exeter (played in tanklike armor by Creator/BrianBlessed) fights with a mace at Agincourt.
68* The Indian film ''Kurukshetra'' opens in a gladiatorial arena, where two muscular brutes duels against each other using gigantic, golden maces, in front of a cheering audience.
69* The Creator/PeterJackson film adaptation of ''Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheFellowshipOfTheRing'' had BigBad Sauron wielding a mace big enough to knock half-a-dozen men into the air with every sweep.
70* ''Film/{{Magadheera}}'': The main villain of the picture, Ranadeev Billa, favors a spiked mace as his weapon, which he used in tandem with his sword. This is the same weapon he used to [[spoiler: crush King Bikram's skull when usurping the throne]].
71* ''Officer Downe'' a B-movie directed by [[Music/{{Slipknot}} Corey Taylor]] based on the Creator/ImageComics series, has the undead cop use...not a nightstick but a dynamic entry tool - the solid steel battering ram used by police to smash open doors.
72* In ''Film/PaleRider'', a gang of toughs grabs some axe handles from the general store and start to rough up some local prospectors. Creator/ClintEastwood's character grabs one of his own and singlehandedly beats them all down with it before proclaiming, "Nothing like a good piece of hickory!"
73* ''Film/{{Pilgrimage}}'': Raymond de Merville, a Norman knight, wields a mace as his weapon of choice.
74* ''Film/RatsNightOfTerror'': The gang has at least two spiked maces at their disposal.
75* Several notable examples appear in ''Franchise/StarWars'':
76** Tusken Raiders are known to favor the gaffi stick, which has a beaked hook on one end and a flanged mace with a spike on the other, which is usually coated in poison. It such an effective weapon that Boba Fett was able to use one to make short work of Stormtroopers.
77** The Force pike wielded by the Emperor's Royal Guard is a {{Vibroweapon}} that is capable of either stunning an opponent at the lower settings, or dismembering a victim at the higher ones.
78* In ''Film/TheSuckers'', Baxter uses a heavy tree branch to kill one of Vandemeer's goons by crushing his windpipe.
79* The martial arts film, ''Film/TenTigersFromKwangtung'', has a weird example with the villain using a golden club... modelled after a nude woman. Yeah, like an Oscar bust, but weaponized.
80* In ''Film/{{The War Lord|1965}}'', Bors (Creator/RichardBoone) is often seen using a club or whatever piece of wood he can bash enemies with.
81[[/folder]]
82
83[[folder:Gamebooks]]
84* Occasionally pops up as a side weapon in the books of the ''Literature/FightingFantasy'' series:
85** You can acquire an enchanted stone ax in ''Literature/MidnightRogue'';
86** You can get a heavy mace in ''Literature/TheKeepOfTheLichLord'' that does more damage to skeletal monsters than the sword you start with. A flanged silver mace is the weapon of choice of BigBad Lord Mortis.
87** ''Literature/TheRiddlingReaver'' offers the option of giving the heroes weapons other than the usual sword, usually with some caveeats (for example axes can deal less damage on a low roll, but higher on a high roll, while broadswords are likely to do more damage but require both hands to use). Maces are avaible and they have the same bonuses as swords, though implicitly the game master could make them better against certain monsters.
88** More generally, Fighting Fantasy monster books like ''Out Of The Pit'' show that some monsters like Stone Golems and Crystal Warriors will simply NoSell bladed weapons. Human adventurers can only damage them with blunt weapons like maces.
89* The Forbidden Gateway, a horror-action duology by Clive and Ian Bailey, has these as some of your major weapons. In the first book ''Where the Shadows Stalk'', your character starts off with a knobkerrie (a heavy African walking stick that was often used as a club) and that could be enhanced by a druid in your dreams to get a [[SavageSpikedWeapons metal spike]] for extra damage. The second book ''Terrors out of Time'', in the beginning you are given a choice between getting a swordcane or your trusty ol' knobkerrie (including its spike if you played the first book). In the 2nd book, you will have to take a short journey into the underworld, so the Egyptian god Thoth gives you an enchanted stone mace that's capable of hurting threats you meet there.
90* In ''Literature/{{Grailquest}}'', in the second book you're given the option of buying a mace as a secondary weapon, though it's outclassed by swords and lances. In the fourth book, the evil guardian you must face to enter the Kingdom of Terror is a zombie wielding a spiked, poison-oozing club which has the same bonuses as Excalibur Jr.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Literature]]
94* ''Literature/TheAlloyOfLaw'': Wayne fights with [[DualWielding a pair]] of dueling canes, which have sword-style grips and are made from a very dense wood, and in skilled hands, are easily capable of breaking bones.
95* In ''Literature/TheBaroqueCycle'', one of Jack Shaftoe's friends kills a MasterSwordsman by using a long pole (which was also his means of arriving at the fight - it's for pole-vaulting over waterways, but also comes in handy as a bludgeon).
96* ''Literature/CodexAlera'': Knights Terra use truly enormous hammers and swords, since their earthcrafting has given them super strength and durability.
97* According to ''Literature/DaveBarrySleptHere'', President Theodore Roosevelt always carried around a big stick, which he used to beat monopolists with when they leaned closer to hear what he was speaking very softly. The stick is also why nobody asked him exactly what he meant by "bully pulpit."
98* ''Dead Man's Land'' by Robert Ryan. During World War One UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill has trained a squad of men to go out into No Man's Land and snatch German prisoners. On the day they finish training, he opens a trunk sent by his friends in Parliament which is full of various blunt objects ranging from a Burmese jungle club to a policeman's truncheon. Winton helps himself to the latter and tells the soldiers to take their pick, dropping a strong hint that he intends (against orders) to accompany them on their snatch raids.
99* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
100** Vetinari walks with a cane, rumoured by some to [[SwordCane conceal a sword]]. He encourages these rumours, because "if people think your stick might be a sword, they forget that it's ''definitely'' a stick."
101** There's also Arch-chancellor Ridcully, whose staff is dependable enough as a bludgeon that he seldom needs to resort to fireballs (or rather, anything that resists a few thwacks from six feet of bog oak is probably going to be immune to fire as well).
102** Igor (not TheIgor, just a guy called Igor that runs a BadGuyBar) uses a club with several {{Weaksauce Weakness}}es of the local beasties added on to it. For regular people, the fact it's a damn good club is usually enough.
103** A club is the cultural weapon of the trolls, ranging from a simple lump of wood (sometimes with a nail in it) to an entire tree, depending on the size of the troll.
104* ''Literature/TheElenium'': Most Trolls are armed with clubs, since they lack the metalworking ability to manufacture swords, and their arms aren't hooked right for stabbing with a spear. Ghwerig, the [[GeniusCripple deformed but intelligent]] [[DepravedDwarf Troll-Dwarf]], carries a huge stone club wrapped with iron bands and proves to be one of the most dangerous enemies Sparhawk ever encounters.
105* ''Literature/FengshenYanyi'' has several examples:
106** Three different characters wield a weapon (in one case a single large one, in the other two a set of two smaller ones) called "Demon-Subduing/Banishing Pestle", which is usually portrayed in art as a sword-like club with flanged edges and themed after the Vajra tool.
107** Many characters, both taoists and laymen, dual-wield Jian, which are medium-sized, ridged truncheons used in combat, sometimes to break swords.
108** Leizhenzi (Or Thunderbolt or Thunder-quaker) is given an enchanted golden cudgel to use in combat: it is powerful enough to cleave a cliff in half when he first uses it to intimidate some soldiers.
109** Tuxingsun, a dwarf character, wields a long steel cudgel with great skill to compensate his short reach.
110* In the ''Literature/FightingFantasy'' gamebooks and the [=RPGs=] based on them, monsters like Stone Golems and Crystal Warriors cannot be harmed by edged weapons and must be destroyed with maces or warhammers.
111* In ''Literature/TheHungerGames'', Katniss describes a previous Games where the only weapons available were heavy spiked maces, so the remaining tributes were forced to bludgeon each other to death.
112* ''Literature/TheIronDream'': Nazi-like superman Feric Jaggar wields the Great Truncheon of Stag Held, which is a mythical big-ass fist on a stick that's heavier than a mountain but lighter than a feather when used by a true descendant of the rightful king.
113* Ma Jong in ''Literature/JudgeDee'' uses a club more often than his sword.
114* ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'':
115** Both Sauron and the Witch-King were fond of maces. The latter was upgraded to an EpicFlail for the film version.
116** "Grond", Morgoth's "Hammer of the Underworld" in Creator/JRRTolkien's ''Literature/TheSilmarillion'' is a mace in some adaptations, a hammer in others. (It is not to be confused with the giant wolf-shaped battering ram named after it that features in ''Return of the King'', despite equal massive smashiness.)
117** Thorin Oakenshield in ''Literature/TheHobbit'' got his epithet from the fact that in the Battle of Azanulbizar he {{dual|Wielding}}-wielded his axe and a large oak branch to defend himself after his shield was destroyed.
118* Sunflash the Mace in ''Literature/{{Redwall}}'', as his name indicates. It's in fact a big branch he used as an ImprovisedWeapon and has stayed with him since. But as a friend points out, if he called it a mace instead, no one would argue the point.
119* Literature/{{Psmith}}: In Creator/PGWodehouse's ''Psmith, Journalist'', the titular character uses his walking stick to fend off a group of New York City thugs. When one of the thugs shouts, "He's got a big stick!" Psmith mutters to himself, "[[LampshadeHanging I am become]] UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt."
120* The ''[--[[StealthPun I said, I've got a big stick]]--]'' is one of Literature/TheCulture's {{Cool Starship}}s.
121* These were also frequently used by nobles in ''Literature/MistbornTheOriginalTrilogy'', the series to which ''Alloy Of Law'' is a sequel.
122* Garrett from the ''Literature/GarrettPI'' novels usually defends himself using a heavy wooden nightstick with a pound of lead embedded in its business end. [=TunFaire=] has laws against civilians carrying swords, and Garrett doesn't like to kill people if he can help it.
123* In ''[[Literature/TheRiftwarCycle Rides a Dread Legion]]'', Sandreena and the other [[WarriorMonk Knights of the order of Dala]] use maces; the TechnicalPacifist explanation (that everyone deserves a chance to yield, even up to the point of death, and spilled blood can't be returned) is mocked when she notes that anyone who believes it can't have seen what a mace does to the human body. Later on in the book, she accidentally kills several people with her mace -- not that they didn't deserve it, but she wanted a prisoner to question.
124* In ''Literature/ShatteredTwilight'', members of the Purgatai, an order of demon-hunting priests, wield "[[SilverHasMysticPowers silvered]]" maces.
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
128* Marcus' signature weapon on ''Series/BabylonFive'': A collapsible bo stick. Creatively, Marcus used it to escape a jail without actually touching it; he convinces the guard to peek into the hole and press the trigger button. Ow.
129-->'''G'kar''': I was doing fine until you showed up with that [sissy gesture] ''thing'' in hand.\
130'''Marcus''': It's a Minbari fighting pike, [[ElegantWeaponForAMoreCivilizedAge several hundred years old]]. You're just jealous because you don't have one. Bad case of "pike-al" envy, if you ask me.
131* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': Sandor Clegane's first scene in Season 2 has him wielding a mace in a tourney melee.
132* In the ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' episode [[Recap/SupernaturalS02E21AllHellBreaksLoosePartOne "All Hell Breaks Loose, Part One" (S02, Ep21)]], Sam uses a wooden plank to defend himself.
133* In ''Series/TheWalkingDead'' Negin's weapon of choice is a baseball bat wrapped in barbed wire.[[/folder]]
134
135[[folder:Music]]
136* From Music/ShiningWizado's [[Wrestling/SteveBlackman "Steve F**king Blackman"]]:
137-->"Don't turn your back or he'll hit you with a UsefulNotes/{{Kendo}} stick"
138[[/folder]]
139
140[[folder:Mythology]]
141* Myth/ClassicalMythology:
142** According to most stories and vase paintings that involved him, this was Heracles'/Hercules' [[WeaponSpecialization weapon of choice]], making this trope OlderThanFeudalism.
143** The bandit Periphetes the Club Bearer beats his victims to death with a metal club. Theseus killed him and claimed the club as his own.
144* {{Oni}} are usually depicted as wielding large, metal-reinforced clubs, usually the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanabo kanabo]]. Strangely, they are also known to be wearing tiger-skins, just like the lion-skin of Hercules. See RealLife entry below.
145* Myth/IrishMythology: The Dagda, god of life, death, harvest and the seasons, wielded a club called Lorg Mór. With one end he could bring death (with a single strike capable of killing nine combatants) and with the other end he could revive the slain. Since it was also described as a magic staff as well as a club, Lorg Mor was most likely a shillelagh, a club that doubled as a walking stick.
146* Rostam, hero of the Persian epic ''Literature/TheShahnameh'', used a mace when he wasn't wrestling people to death. Most Persian heroes used maces, as far as that goes.
147* Ditto Myth/RussianMythologyAndTales. The Bogatyrs were famous for their maces. Here's a bit of RussianHumour about it: Ilya Muromets and [[Literature/TheThreeMusketeers D'Artagnan]] are going to fight. D'Artagnan takes a piece of chalk and draws a cross on Ilya's breastplate. "What is it for?" asks Ilya. "I shall pierce you with my rapier at this point!" answers D'Artagnan. "Alyosha, cover him whole with flour", says Ilya. "I'm going to fight with my mace".
148* Hanuman from the Indian version of Myth/HinduMythology uses a mace as his [[WeaponSpecialization weapon of choice]]. Vishnu also has one called Kaumodaki.
149* Sharur, "smasher of thousands", was the weapon and symbol of the Sumerian/Akkadian god Ninurta. It talks, it flies, provides a way to talk to the god Enlil, and can turn into a ''winged lion''. It also smashes stuff.
150[[/folder]]
151
152[[folder:Podcasts]]
153* The ''Jade Regent'' RPG Actual Play podcasts from Podcast/{{RPGMP3}} feature a weapon called [[NamedWeapons Oathtaker]]. During their travels, the adventurers [[RobbingTheDead stumbled across]] this magical ''tetsubo'' (a huge Oriental bludgeoning weapon). Apart from its obvious uses, it can also force people under a [[MagicallyBindingContract Blood Geas]]. It's currently wielded by Harold Shinken, who discovered that the Viking women of the [[GrimUpNorth Linnorm Kingdoms]] were [[ChickMagnet very impressed]] by the weapon's... [[PhallicWeapon craftsmanship]].
154[[/folder]]
155
156[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
157* [[Wrestling/ProWrestlingNOAH NOAH]] GHC {{Tag Team}} specialist MAYBACH Taniguchi carries a black rod with U on its end which he uses to choke people.
158* Bárbaro Cavernario in Wrestling/{{CMLL}} carries a plain old wooden stick, though he does shine it up.
159* Often crossed with WoodenKatanasAreEvenBetter: Wrestling/ChrisAdams used one back in the 1980s when they were called UsefulNotes/{{Kendo}} sticks. Starting with [[Wrestling/JimFullington The Sandman]] in Wrestling/{{ECW}} in 1994, they are called UsefulNotes/{{Singapore}} Canes.
160* Wrestling/HacksawJimDuggan carries around a TwoByFore.
161* On the March 8, 2002 episode of ''Hardway Wrestling TV'', Wrestling/BlindRage defeated Ran Zander in a "Loser Takes Ten Lashes With The Singapore Cane Match."
162[[/folder]]
163
164[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
165* ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'': Maces are a rare [[HumongousMecha BattleMech]] weapon. In exchange for doing ludicrous amounts of damage (under the Tactical Handbook, a 50-ton 'Mech using the weapon deals twenty damage where a hatchet would deal only ten, putting it on par with some of the largest {{BFG}}s), it's inaccurate and inflicts penalties to its hit numbers and skill rolls for recovering from inevitable misses.
166* ''Tabletopgame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
167** Maces and morningstars are generally favored by the Cleric class. In early editions, this is because they are considered bludgeoning weapons and clerics are forbidden by religious law from drawing blood. In later editions, it is because they are "simple" weapons. The Ruby Rod of Asmodeus and the Wand of Orcus are two of the more powerful weapons in the game's catalog.
168** ''Tabletopgame/DungeonsAndDragonsThirdEdition'' (and by extension, the 3.5 update) maintained the tradition of "Clerics with Maces" in a novel way. Weapons were placed into generic classes, with different character classes have access to different weapon classes. "All simple weapons" includes maces. Of the eleven core classes, the martial ones (Barbarian, Paladin, Ranger, and Fighter) get martial weapons, which are numerically better than maces (typically by having better/more frequent critical hits). Monk, Druid, and Wizard got a specific, short list of weapons, with monk and druid having specific standouts that are ''slightly'' better than maces (fists and the scimitar, respectively), while the wizard's list is deliberately awful except for the quarterstaff. Bards and Rogues received a few more weapon proficiencies than Clerics, motivating them to use the short sword, or possibly whip. As a result, despite the generic weapon groupings, Clerics were the only class motivated to actually use a mace as a primary weapon.
169** In ''Tabletopgame/DungeonsAndDragonsFifthEdition'', the Maul deals the most damage of any single weapon (tied with the Greatsword, which is identical mechanics-wise aside from damage type). It's the heaviest weapon in the game aside from the Pike.
170* ''TabletopGame/LegendOfTheFiveRings'': As they don't have as much blood spilling around as swords, huge iron banded clubs are used by the Crab Clan against the monsters of the Shadowland.
171* ''TabletopGame/RocketAge'': There are plenty of people walking around with staffs, clubs, and maces. They usually appear in the hands of more primitive peoples or are a traditional weapon used in ceremonies and duels, like the Jovian beaked mace.
172* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'': Matching their primitive natures, lack of sophistication and aggressively direct approach to warfare, [[OurGiantsAreDifferent giants]] and [[OurTrollsAreDifferent trolls]] typically fight with crude but powerful clubs. The giants' in particular usually consist of a simple uprooted tree, often with human-sized weapons crudely rammed into it to give it extra piercing power.
173* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
174** Power mauls are available to Space Marines and others with access to power weapons; while they lack the armor-penetrating power of a power sword or axe, they do provide a nice strength bonus, good for taking on weaker units.
175** Shock Mauls are the melee weapon of choice for the Arbites, as the name suggests these are mauls which apply an electric shock to stun targets when they hit.
176** The elite Deathwing Knights of the Dark Angels have the Mace of Absolution as their weapon of choice.
177[[/folder]]
178
179[[folder:Video Games]]
180* ''VideoGame/NineMonkeysOfShaolin'' have your range of equipment (being based on StockWushuWeapons) including two maces. You can obtain the Abbott's staff, a metal cudgel on a long pole, and get the Jade Cliff near the end of the game, a mace made of ''jade'' which can magically deal greater damage than other weapons.
181* ''VideoGame/AgeOfMythology'' has Hercules, wielding his trademark wooden club. The Cyclops and Mountain Giant myth units also wielded clubs. In ''[[ExpansionPack The Titans]]'' we have the Atlantean Katapeltes infantry, who wields a mace.
182* ''VideoGame/ArcanumOfSteamworksAndMagickObscura'' has a variety of hammers and maces available. They had the special effect of dealing Fatigue damage, which meant that they could knock enemies unconscious and effectively drained {{Mana}} from mages. Oh, and they could also be used to open locked doors and chests [[BreakableWeapons without being damaged]] (Axes are another option for this).
183* ''VideoGame/ArmoredCoreV'': You get the [[NonIndicativeName Mass Blade]] which is the mother of all big sticks. It's really a concrete pillar with some I-beams and a spiked wrecking ball stuck on one end and a few rocket boosters strapped on for good measure.
184* ''Franchise/BaldursGate'': Across all of the games, the Cleric class is only able to use bludgeoning weapons.
185* ''VideoGame/{{Ballz}}'': Kronk the caveman carries a large white club.
186* ''VideoGame/BatenKaitos'': In ''Origins'', main character Milly wields large twin maces. And she is very, very skilled with them.
187* ''VideoGame/{{Bloodborne}}'' has the "Whirligig Saw" from '' The Old Hunters'' [=DLC=], a Trick Weapon that goes from long-handled mace to pummel beasts in to death to a pair of buzzsaws on a stick to shred your foes to strips until either they die or your stamina runs out.
188* ''VideoGame/CityOfHeroes'': The War Mace powerset.
189* ''VideoGame/DemonsSouls'' and ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'' have weapons that run the gamut from simple, small maces to very large hammers crafted from the setting's WorldTree and another weapon that amounts to a severed tooth of an Everlasting Dragon. Some of the larger weapons are ornate and are used by "Holy" warriors, like Demon's Souls' Bramd and Dark Souls' Grant. ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsII'' maintains the tradition by keeping "archtree branch" and "dragon's tooth" smashers from previous game as well as adding new ones like "boulder tied to a tree", "the top half of a dragon's skull", and "''anvil on a stick''". The ''Crown of the Old Iron King'' DLC currently tops them all with Smelter Hammer, formerly a giant axe, now melted into misshapen iron lump about as large and thick as your character's entire body.
190* ''VideoGame/DiabloIII'': Maces are just one of the many melee weapons melee types can wield. In addition, the very first boss, the Skeleton King, wields a powerful two-handed one, which you can later grab for yourself.
191* ''VideoGame/DonkeyKongCountry2DiddysKongQuest'': Fittingly, [[PunchClockVillain Klubba]] and [[PaletteSwap Kudgel]] both wield a massive wooden club with metal spikes. The former will only wield it against you if you try to get past him without paying his toll, while the latter, being a boss encounter, has no such compunctions.
192* ''VideoGame/Dota2'': Faceless Void uses a club, smaller than the usual big like the ones in the example, but there's a reason why he's one of the more dangerous carries in the game. A swing from his club can lock down the enemy in one place, or he can stop the time to ensure a lot of club-beating time. Build up a lot of damage or attack speed items, and suddenly, a club is deadlier than a sword.
193* ''VideoGame/DragonQuest'':
194** In ''VideoGame/DragonQuestII'', [[TheDragon Atlas]] wields a huge wooden club.
195** Several clubs are among the weapon options in ''VideoGame/DragonQuestIX'', though they're considered part of the hammer skill line. {{Smash Mook}}s like trolls and cyclopes use spiked and non-spiked versions.
196* ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'' features several varieties of mace and war hammer, which compared to slashing or piercing weapons trade a reduced OneHitKill probability for a better chance of causing knock-back; high-level mace- or hammerdwarves can launch enemies into nearby walls with enough force to reduce them to LudicrousGibs. Or walls about a quarter-mile away with enough force to reduce them to LudicrousGibs. [[BloodyHilarious It's all good]].
197* In the ''VideoGame/DynastyWarriors'' series, Diao Chan, Taishi Ci, and Huang Gai are often depicted wielding clubs of various types. In later games, club weapons include "Steel Whips" (essentially flexible cudgels), iron rods and huge clubs with massive heads.
198* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'':
199** Throughout the series, maces, warhammers, and even simple clubs are found as weapons. While the exact mechanics vary from game to game, they are typically classified as "blunt weapons," being slower to swing than other weapons but also dealing more damage per strike. In ''Skyrim'', they (realistically) also have the potential to circumvent a percentage of a foe's armor when struck as well.
200** Massive clubs are a favored weapon of the [[OurGiantsAreBigger Giant race]]. Some have a large rock tied to the end, turning them into primitive warhammers. Others have spikes of stone or bone, turning them into primitive battleaxes.
201** In the [[ScaryBlackMan Yokudan/Redguard]] religions tradition, Ruptga, the "Tall Papa" and [[TopGod chief deity]] of the pantheon created Sep, the serpentine Yokudan version of [[GodIsDead Lorkhan]], to help him save spirits from Satakal's ViciousCycle of eating the world. However, Sep convinced other spirits to help him build an easier alternative, even though Ruptga did not participate or approve. When the plan proved to be a failure, leaving many spirits stranded on a dying patchwork worldskin, Ruptga punished Sep by "squashing him with a big stick". Sep could then only [[GodInHumanForm slink around in a dead skin]] or swim about harmlessly in the sky.
202** Scourge is a LegendaryWeapon mace and artifact of Malacath, the [[OurGodsAreDifferent Daedric Prince]] of the [[AllOfTheOtherReindeer Spurned and Ostracized]]. Malacath dedicated it for use by mortals, and any Daedra who attempts to wield it will be vanished to the [[VoidBetweenTheWorlds Void]].
203** The Mace of Molag Bal is an artifact of the eponymous Daedric Prince of [[TheCorrupter Domination and Corruption]]. It has the power to drain the strength and magicka of those it strikes, making it an effecting weapon against warriors and [[MageKiller mages]] alike. In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]'', it also has the ability to [[YourSoulIsMine absorb souls]]. Molag Bal himself [[spoiler:uses it against you in the final battle of ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsOnline Online]]'''s main quest]].
204** Mazken (aka Dark Seducers), are an intelligent race of [[OurDemonsAreDifferent lesser Daedra]] in service to [[MadGod Sheogorath]]. They primarily use maces (and the occasional axe) as their favored weapons.
205** In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion Oblivion]]'''s ''Knights of the Nine'' expansion, you can acquire the Mace of the Crusader, a mace blessed by the [[OurGodsAreDifferent Divines]] themselves and formerly wielded by the legendary hero of mankind/[[FantasticRacism racist]] [[TheBerserker berserker]], Pelinal Whitestrake.
206** In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]'', the favored weapon of the [[ChurchMilitant Vigil of Stendarr]] is a mace.
207%%* ''VideoGame/EternalCardGame'': There are plenty of maces both for you and your units to use.
208* ''VideoGame/EternalDarkness'': Paul finds a mace on a wall in his chapter. [[spoiler:It's also what his ghost wields in the final battle.]]
209* ''Franchise/{{Fallout}}'': The [[VideoGame/Fallout1 first]] [[VideoGame/Fallout2 two]] games had several bludgeoning weapons, but the series really gained its own place in here when [[VideoGame/Fallout3 the third game]] brought in the Behemoths, mutants so large they use fire hydrants as melee weapons. Then ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'' gave the player the Rebar club: a long rebar pole with a huge chunk of concrete at the end. The DLC's add the Nuka Breaker, which is a rebar club with a Nuka Cola sign in place of the concrete, the X-2 Antenna, which inflicts {{EMP}} damage on machines, and Old Glory, a flag staff capped with a golden eagle.
210* ''VideoGame/{{Fate}}'' has clubs and maces as one of the many weapon classes, usually dealing high crushing damage at the cost of low speed. The game also has hammers as a separate weapon class from clubs and staves as a two-handed variant meant for magic-based builds.
211* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy:''
212** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'', Umaro's weapon of choice is a massive club carved out of behemoth bone.
213** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'' gives us the Nail Bat -- a baseball bat with nails driven through it. In keeping with the "powerful but crude" nature of this trope, it has one of the highest attack stats of the weapons available when you find it, but has no materia slots for character customisation and special skills.
214** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI'' featured a variety of blunt objects with which to beat enemies with. Primarily clubs and staffs, which were ''usually'' "wielded" by mage classes more interested in what the stats on the weapon could do for their casting than actually using the weapon, but both being able to be used by Monks for melee offense. Clubs were especially popular for [=MNKs=] before a nerf to the TP return of multi-hit weapon skills like club's Hexa Strike. Also of note, some clubs were hammers, that were primarily equippable by ''White Mages.'' The White Mage relic weapon was ''Mjollnir.''
215** Maces appear in the ''Ivalice Alliance'' sub-series, most notably in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII'', ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyTacticsAdvance'', and ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyTacticsA2'', where they're most commonly the province of MagicKnight classes such as Sage, Green Mage, and Red Battlemage.
216* ''VideoGame/FireEmblemFates'': The Hoshidan side introduced Japanese takes on the common enemy types and common weapon classes, where clubs and maces were used as the oriental equivalent of longstanding franchise standard Axes. Some bludgeoning weapons were classed as axes before then, however.
217* ''VideoGame/ForHonor'': The Shugoki, one of the Samurai characters, fights with a Kanabo befitting of the oni he is modelled after.
218* ''VideoGame/GoldenSun''
219** In ''VideoGame/GoldenSun1'', three people can use maces: Isaac and Garet, both warrior types, and Mia, resident WhiteMagicianGirl and healer. Each character has a unique sprite for each weapon type, so while Mia gets a small studded metal sphere, Isaac gets a flanged version, and Garet gets a classic big ball o' spikes the size of his head on a stick we all know and love. In the sequel, Sheba (a SquishyWizard) uses them, while Mia, Sheba, Ivan, and [[LadyOfWar Jenna]] use staffs.
220** In ''[[VideoGame/GoldenSunDarkDawn Dark Dawn]]'', maces are carried by men-- Matthew and Tyrell (Isaac and Garet's suspiciously similar sons), Rief (Mia's suspiciously similar son), and [[spoiler: Eoleo the pirate]]. Staffs can be used by Rief, Ivan's daughter Karis, [[spoiler: Prince Amiti, and [[ShrineMaiden Himi]]]].
221* ''VideoGame/GuildWars'':
222** Oddly averted in [[VideoGame/GuildWars the first game]], one of the few ''RPG''s not to feature clubs or maces of any kind. At least, in the traditional sense. Two-handed warhammers are a warrior weapon, and there are truncheons and canes in the game -- but they're actually classified as one-handed wands for magic-using classes. Using one in battle would simply toss a weak magic projectile at your enemy.
223** ''VideoGame/GuildWars2'' finally allowed one-handed maces to be used hand-to-hand. Warriors are the only class that can [[DualWield dual wield]] them. Guardians can equip them in their main hand for a more traditional Paladin look.
224* ''VideoGame/{{ICO}}'': the titular horned boy's first weapon is a wooden stick that falls off of a torch; it's still burning when he picks it up. He later finds proper swords scattered about, but he still uses them the same way. [[spoiler:The best weapon you can get in a normal playthrough is the Spiked Club, which brutalizes everything in two hits.]]
225* ''VideoGame/JitsuSquad'': One of the heroes, Jazz Amun, carries a mace [[NamedWeapons called the "Ishtar"]] as his primary weapon. Collecting enough power-ups will give Ishtar spikes for extra damage, or momentarily turn it into a ''guandao''.
226* ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising'' features clubs as one of the available weapon types. Pit even quotes UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt during a conversation with Viridi.
227* ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'': While the game calls Saïx's weapon a [[{{BFS}} claymore]], it's actually closer to a mace or [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanabo kanabo]].
228* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfSilkroad'': The first game have three playable heroes, one of them being a Mongolian barbarian who wields a gigantic spiked mace for smashing faces, in contrast to the other two who use swords.
229* ''VideoGame/{{Mabinogi}}'':
230** Among its blunt weapons, something of note for taking this trope literally is the Broad Stick. It's a stick. A broad one. And you hit things with it. That's about it, though to its credit, it's very cheap to repair in a game of extremely expensive repair systems, and earlier on it can do significant damage.
231** Giants are all about blunt weapons; they have their own bigger and nastier clubs, are able to [[DualWielding dual-wield]] blunt weapons, and in a pinch can punch down certain trees and use the resulting [[TelephonePolearm Broken Logs]] as weapons.
232* ''VideoGame/MediEvil'': The first game has [[https://gallowmere.fandom.com/wiki/Club the Club]] for Sir Daniel Fortesque to use, while he's far from being primitive nor savage. The giant wooden weapon is a powerful and useful part of his arsenal, capable of smashing rocks and weak areas of walls, and its primary attack deals as much damage as the games' hammer. Although being made of wood means it can wear down quite quickly, it also means it can become an impromptu giant torch that can set other things on fire.
233* ''Franchise/MortalKombat'':
234** Jax and Reiko both had a spiked club as heir [[WeaponSpecialization weapon of choice]] in ''VideoGame/MortalKombat4''. The same game gives [[EvilSorcerer Quan Chi]] a mace.
235** The {{Oni}} Drahmin from ''VideoGame/MortalKombatDeadlyAlliance'' had an iron club mounted on his right arm.
236** The Oni Warlords from ''VideoGame/MortalKombatShaolinMonks'' use maces so large they [[ShockwaveStomp they cause shockwaves when slammed into the ground]].
237** The chaos worshiping Havik from ''VideoGame/MortalKombatDeception'' uses a morning star.
238** [[WarriorMonk Kai]] has a spiked club as his weapon in ''VideoGame/MortalKombatArmageddon''.
239** [[BadassNative Nightwolf]] adds a gunstock war club to his arsenal in ''VideoGame/MortalKombat11''. GuestFighter ComicBook/{{Spawn}} uses a modified mace [[MultiMeleeMaster alongside his sword and battle axe during gameplay]]. It is also used in his "Soul Shattering War Club" special attack which allows Spawn to [[ArmorPiercingAttack break forms through his opponent's armor]].
240* ''VideoGame/MountAndBlade'' has a variety of bludgeoning weapons, the most primitive and weakest of which are the wooden stick, club, and cudgel. The variety of dedicated maces available is much greater, and most of them are viable blunt weapons, which can deal significant damage [[ArmorPiercingAttack right through heavy armor]] and will [[TapOnTheHead render foes unconscious]] as opposed to dead, so that they can be captured and sold for ransom.
241* ''VideoGame/NinjaShadowOfDarkness'': One of the earliest GameBreaker weapons for Kurosawa the ninja is the ''tetsubo'', a spiked mace, which can kill several lower-tier enemies in ''one'' hit. At that point in the game, you're not knee-deep in EliteMook territory yet, so the massive club is going to be your favourite weapon until the ''nagayari'' a few levels later.
242* ''VideoGame/Persona5'': Party member Ryuji Sakamoto, a.k.a. Skull, specializes in bludgeon-type weapons when fighting monsters. These include everything you can think of, from [[PipePain steel pipes]] to [[BatterUp baseball bats]] to hammers and maces.
243* ''VideoGame/Persona5Strikers'': The game's first boss carries a long, thin mace that she uses in her base and boss forms, though she snaps it in two and discards it when her health falls below half.
244* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'':
245** Cubone and Marowak's bone clubs and the held item Thick Club, which [[DualWielding doubles]] either species' attack stat.
246** And also the Timburr line, which wield huge logs (Timburr), girders ([[PunnyName Gurdurr]]), and concrete cylinders (Conkeldurr).
247** There's also Mimikyu, the Disguise Pokemon, who dresses up like Pikachu with a rag designed in its image and uses a wooden stick to emulate Pikachu's tail, which it can use to attack with Wood Hammer, Play Rough, and other attacks.
248* ''VideoGame/PuyoPuyo'': Onion Pixie is always seen carrying a spiky club. It being a "big" stick is relative in this case since Onion Pixie is quite tiny.
249* In ''VideoGame/RagnarokOnline'', maces are generally used by Acolyte, Merchant, Super Novice, and Swordman classes, primarily Monk class as their main weapon. Maces have a wide variety and are mostly unbreakable unless you're attempting to upgrade the weapon.
250* ''VideoGame/RuneScape'': Dungeoneering boss Rammernaut Hoskins is a huge, heavily armoured warrior that definitely like this trope, requisitioning first a "Big mace", then a "Bigger mace" [[note]]Requested: Bigger mace - Fulfilled: Yes - Notes: The last mace which I could not even lift was like a one-handed hammer to him. This calls for drastic measures.[[/note]], and tries to take it to the max with "Biggest mace" [[note]]Requested: Biggest mace - Fulfilled: No - Notes: Any bigger and he'd have a balance problem. The last one is more than sufficient.[[/note]].
251* ''VideoGame/SamuraiWarriors'': surprisingly little, though we have Ishikawa Goemon (who wields a spiked mace that can turn into a flail for certain attacks) and Fukushima Masanori, whose weapon of choice is described as a "Double Kanasaibo", consisting in a massive woode staff with enormous cilindrical metal heads at both ends. Said heads features studs from which spikes can pop out in certain attacks.
252* ''VideoGame/ShovelKnight'': King Knight fights using a sceptre.
253* ''Videogame/SilentHill4TheRoom'': an old-fashioned nightstick is the strongest melee weapon available for Eileen. It has the drawback of shorter range than her other weapons, so she cannot attack enemies that have been knocked down.
254* ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':
255** The foremost example is the Piko Piko Hammer, Amy Rose's signature weapon, [[HyperspaceMallet which she can summon to her hands at will,]] and is about as large as Amy is tall.
256** ''VideoGame/SonicUnleashed'' has the Titans, very large enemies that carry clubs made from ''entire trees.''
257* ''[[VideoGame/SoulSeries SoulCalibur]]'': Rock, originally favoring axes, has used a mace in more recent games to differentiate him from Astaroth.
258* ''Videogame/{{Splitgate}}:'' The BFB is a large, high-tech bludgeon in the shape of a mace that deals 150 damage with every swing, [[OneHitKill killing nearly everything in the game in one shot]]. While you lose out in range, any encounter that starts tightly enough that the melee dash can close the distance is basically won with it.
259* ''VideoGame/StickWar'': Your starter units are Clubmen, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin who wield clubs]], and they're pretty primitive compared to the swords you get to upgrade them to after driving out Swordwrath and adopting their technology. Giants also carry clubs and can do much more damage with them.
260* ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'' features a handful of club-like weapons--in the beta, the Sniper's melee weapon was actually a baton instead of his [[KukrisAreKool kukri]], and it's still coded as 'club' in the game. Surviving club weapons include the Boston Basher, which is a huge spiked club, and the Pain Train, a broken axe handle with a railroad spike in the end. Closely related to clubs are the Neon Annihilator, Conscientious Objector, Freedom Shaft, and Crossing Guard are all signs or other items on posts that have been pulled up from the ground for use as bludgeons.
261* ''VideoGame/ThroneOfDarkness'': The tetsubo is one of the top-tier polearms, though most classes can't equip them or display them as spears anyway. The exception is the Brick, whose character model is always depicted with a tetsubo regardless of what his polearm is.
262* ''VideoGame/WarcraftIII'': Mountain Giants can rip entire trees from the ground and use them as clubs. Ogres also use maces and/or big wooden clubs, Faceless Ones use nasty-looking spiked maces.
263* ''VideoGame/WarriorsOfFate'' have spiked maces as collectible power-ups, which deals greater damage than swords (at the cost of limited range). Enemies killed by this weapon have their own unique death animations - via instantly turning to LudicrousGibs.
264* In ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' one-handed maces (the weapon class which includes hammers) are often designed for healers, playing off the old equation of maces with priests, although there remains no circumstance in the game beyond about level 10 where a priest could possibly ever want to actually hit someone since even if they have no mana left a wand is still more damaging. Rogues tend to actually use one-handed maces to hit people, as do some shamans and death knights. Two-handed maces live on in with paladins and druids, warriors, and death knights who often use giant maces. Before some of the later ''Burning Crusade'' raids went live, [[http://www.wowhead.com/?item=28800 this]] was considered one of the best weapons in the game for retribution paladins.
265[[/folder]]
266
267[[folder:Web Comics]]
268* Skye from ''Webcomic/ChampionsOfFaraus'' fights with a mace.
269* In ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'', Nanase [[http://www.egscomics.com/comic/2011-08-16 imagines]] Ellen as a cavewoman DualWielding wooden clubs.
270* ''Webcomic/HeroesOfThantopolis'': the main character, Cyrus, uses a [[SpontaneousWeaponCreation summoned]] mace
271* ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'': Clubkind is the first strife specibus used by [[TheStoner Gamzee Makara]]; he personally favours juggling clubs and never uses anything else. He abandons it after [[MonsterClown sobering up]] in favour of [[ConfusionFu Jokerkind]].
272* ''Webcomic/MarbleGateDungeon'': Colleen picks up [[https://marblegate.webcomic.ws/comics/43 a flanged mace]] as her primary weapon when going dungeon diving.
273* In ''Webcomic/PrincessChroma'', the main character prefers to fight with a mace.
274* Roy from ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'' has a greatclub while his sword is broken.
275* ''Webcomic/{{Waterworks}}'': One of Connie's first weapons is a mace (more specifically a morning star)... obtained from a can of [[http://mspfanventures.com/?s=43&p=15 Mace]]
276[[/folder]]
277
278[[folder:Web Original]]
279* ''Film/{{Sockbaby}}'': Chub Chub.
280* WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows, reviewing Flo Rida's "Club Can't Handle Me".
281-->'''Todd''': Now, maybe it's just me, but if the club can't handle him right now, my only conclusion that they're using the wrong club. Now, ''*lifts a club*'' this is '''MY''' club. It is an authentic replica of a war club used in battle by ancient Greek soldiers, and trust me: '''It CAN handle you right now.'''
282* Doctor Oobleck's thermos from ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'' turns into a kanabo/napalm-launcher when he needs to fight. He's strong enough and skilled enough to total MiniMecha with it.
283* In ''AudioPlay/TheCartographersHandbook'', soldiers in the RSA are regularly outfitted with specially designed maces referred to as "Clementines." They are designed to reduce the amount of blood spilt while fighting Wendigos in close quarters in order to prevent infection.
284[[/folder]]
285
286[[folder:Western Animation]]
287* ''WesternAnimation/BallotBoxBunny'': Referenced in this exchange:
288-->'''Bugs Bunny''': I [[UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt speak softly]], but I carry a ''big stick''!\
289'''Yosemite Sam''': Oh yeah!? Well, I speak ''loud''! And I carry a ''[[LargeHam BIIIIIIIIGGER]]'' stick!! And I use it too!\
290'''''(WHAM)'''''
291* ''Toys/{{Bionicle}}'': Elite Skrall are armed with Thorny Clubs.
292* ''WesternAnimation/CaptainCaveman'' had a club that doubled as a [[WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones Flintstones]]-tech gadget-filled SwissArmyWeapon.
293* ''WesternAnimation/CelebrityDeathmatch'': Referenced again in a match with Washington vs Lincoln, who were being coached by Nixon and Roosevelt respectively. Midway through the match, Nixon and Roosevelt have an exchange of words, but Nixon then comments that he can't hear Roosevelt because he's speaking so softly. Roosevelt then pulls out a big stick and proceeds to hit him with it.
294* ''WesternAnimation/DungeonsAndDragons1983'': As befits his role as "The Barbarian" of his group, Bobby wields a club as his magical artifact. It should be noted he's also a rather scrawny 10-year old boy, which makes it rather funny when he swings the club and its enchantment allows him to send much, MUCH bigger opponents flying or cause localized earthquakes.
295* ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}'': Since the titular creatures turn into stone during daytime, the Vikings who fought them carried maces for that purpose. A spiked morningstar is also [[DarkActionGirl Demona's]] melee weapon of choice, if she's not using magic, guns, or her claws.
296* ''WesternAnimation/IvanhoeTheKingsKnight'': One of the CoDragons Reginald Front-de-Boeuf, favours the mace. He uses it frequently in tournaments and duels.
297* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'': Hawkgirl fights almost exclusively with a large, electrified mace. It's made of Nth metal, which has energy-disrupting and [[AntiMagic Anti-Magical]] properties, making it a [[SwissArmyWeapon very versatile]] smashing tool.
298* The ''WesternAnimation/MightyMightor'' had a magical club that changed him from his SecretIdentity into his heroic form and could shoot various forms of energy (as well as beating up {{villains}}).
299* In ''[[WesternAnimation/{{Thundercats 2011}} ThunderCats (2011)]]'' TheDragon Grune has a huge, spiky ''kanabo'' that's also a MorphWeapon, turning into a {{BFG}} LightningGun. He wields a more ordinary round-headed mace in {{flashback}}s prior to his FaceHeelTurn.
300[[/folder]]
301
302[[folder:Real Life]]
303* Maces with glass or stone heads were invented in the [[UsefulNotes/TheMiddleEast ancient Near East]] thousands of years ago and may have been the first weapons invented specifically for killing other humans instead of doubling as utility and hunting tools (such as the knife, spear, or bow and arrow). A large animal's skull is usually too thick to reliably crush with a mace, but human skulls are easier to crack. The maces became especially useful after the invention of helmets made of copper or bronze, since the maces could still give a concussion to a person wearing one.
304* The countries of the UsefulNotes/UnitedKingdom, as well as {{UsefulNotes/Australia}}, {{UsefulNotes/Canada}}, and the UsefulNotes/UnitedStates, all use "ceremonial maces" as symbols of power within parliament; the US version can even be symbolically brandished at Congresspersons who are disrupting the proceedings. It is, quite literally, the carrying of a big stick for the sake of speaking softly. Actually walloping an elected representative upside the head with it is depreciated these days, of course, but it ''has'' happened on occasion. Gavels are a related item.
305* King UsefulNotes/HenryVIII had a "walking staff", a combination [[ImpossiblyCoolWeapon mace and]] ''[[BoomStick gun.]]''
306* When swords fell out of favor as part of a gentleman's standard outfit, walking sticks replaced them. Being about three feet of sturdy wood and topped with a metal handle, they made excellent clubs in a pinch. The British art of Singlestick and the French art of Canne De Combat were martial arts based around walking sticks, using many of the principles of fencing.
307* In 1856, Preston Brooks beat his fellow congressman Charles Sumner into unconsciousness with his walking stick on the floor of the Senate. Sumner had made an impassioned speech against slavery, comparing it to the "rape of a virgin" and worked the names of two Southern congressmen into the analogy, and fellow Southerner Brooks felt that retaliation was in order. Although his deed was lambasted by the North, he was hailed as a hero in the South and gifted a number of replacement walking sticks for the one he broke on Sumner's head. A number of these canes were engraved with the words "Hit him again!".
308* The Filipino art of UsefulNotes/{{Eskrima}} features fighting sticks as one of their primary weapons, usually with [[DualWielding one in each hand]].
309* The Kanabō, also known as the Tetsubō, was a popular weapon in feudal {{UsefulNotes/Japan}}. It consisted of a long, heavy wooden stick -- typically straight with an octagonal cross-section -- covered with iron studs or spikes over at least half of its length, making it the Samurai equivalent of a [[BatterUp baseball bat]]. There was a kata (fighting technique) -- Kanabō-jutsu or Tetsubō-jutsu -- specifically devoted to its use, though it is believed that it could also be employed with kata from both Bojutsu (staff) and Kenjutsu (sword) depending on the size. Some later versions were completely clad in, or made entirely of, iron. In Japanese folklore, it was the favoured weapon of the {{Oni}}. According to [[Website/{{Wikipedia}} The Other Wiki]], there is a saying in Japanese: "Like giving a kanabō to an oni" — which means to give an extra advantage to someone who already has the advantage (the strong made stronger).
310* The Flemish ''goedendag'' (good-day) combined Carry A Big Stick with a polearm. Essentially a very thick, iron-banded or studded pole topped with a spear point, the idea behind the ''goedendag'' was that you hauled a man off of his horse with the spear, and then bludgeoned him to death with the pole. It supposedly took its name from a [[TrustPassword shibboleth]] used during the Revolt of Bruges in 1301, in which anyone who replied to the Dutch greeting "goedendag" in French or with a French accent would promptly be killed with one.
311* And then there is the Chinese weapon know as the [[http://www.chinatown-shop.com/images/p3/11048g.jpg Wolf Tooth Club]], which is in fact every bit as badass as it sounds, with a pointy bit on one end and a head full of spikes on the other.
312* The Irish shillelagh is a club made out of a big stick, usually with a large knob at the end. The shillelagh came in handy when the Irish were forbidden to own weapons. A "walking stick" that just happened to be stout and heavy enough to beat the tar out of someone- especially if you loaded it with a little lead in the head. It has become a symbol of Irish culture, but also a symbol of Irish violence.
313* Some ancient Russian warriors were strong, but poor and couldn't afford a sword or flanged mace. They instead wielded an oslop - a huge, two-handed club, usually wooden and reinforced by iron, rarely made of iron. Weighing up to 12 kg (average 6-8), oslop is considered by some to be the heaviest practical melee weapon ever. With two-handed grip providing enough leverage, a single hit from such a monstrosity, even if blocked by shield, was guaranteed to knock the opponent off his feet. The word "oslop" was later turned into "ostolop", meaning a stupid man, referring to the fact that the oslop didn't require any skill to use, just [[DumbMuscle strength]].
314* [[ImprovisedWeapon In a pinch]] a thill ('Ogloblya', a shaft used to attach a horse to a carriage) from nearby 'telega' could be used by local strongman.
315* The knobkerrie is a traditional club of the Nguni-speaking peoples of UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica and environs (e.g. the Zulu, Xhosa, Sotho, Swazi...), coincidentally rather similar to the shillelagh. These days, it is usually [[MundaneUtility used as a walking stick]]. Crossed knobkerries currently appear in the coat of arms of South Africa and a crossed knobkerrie and assegai formerly showed up on the flag of UsefulNotes/{{Lesotho}}.
316* Soldiers who had to raid enemy trenches during [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarI The Great War]] found that the rifle and its bayonet were too long to use in such close confines, and it also helped to have weapons that could kill more silently. Sure you had your standard-issue weapons, but when you need something with a little more oomph there's [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trench_raiding_club the trench club]]. Fashioned in the field by squad carpenters, they were made with any wood-handles and on-hand metals, including ''defused grenades'', to create maces, morningstars, and even [[EpicFlail flails]] to get the drop on enemy troopers and finish them off after a gas attack.
317* The typical MartialArtsStaff takes this to a literal extreme, being literally a big stick.
318* Much of the traditional Māori arsenal is nothing ''but'' bludgeoning implements.
319** The ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patu patu]]'' ([[BlingBlingBang and its jade cousin the mere]]) are on the smaller side of this trope, but they are still capable of doing a good amount of damage. They are bladed, teardrop-shaped weapons about the size of a forearm that are hard enough to bash in some skulls.
320** On the other side of the scale is ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiaha taiaha]]'' which [[MixAndMatchWeapon combines the techniques]] of a MartialArtsStaff with a spear, which [[JavelinThrower can also be thrown]].
321* The [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunstock_war_club gunstock war club]] is a Native American club weapon, so named because of its similar shape to the wooden stocks of rifles and muskets. Gunstock clubs were most predominantly used by Eastern Woodland, Central and Northern Plains tribes in the 18th and 19th centuries.
322* The Fijian totokia is a wooden weapon with a beaked head that is used in a similar manner to a warhammer. Most notably however, this weapon is the inspiration for the Tusken Raider gaffi stick.
323[[/folder]]

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