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8[[quoteright:350:[[WesternAnimation/VillainousCartoonNetwork https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/savage_spiked_weapons_demencia.png]]]] [[caption-width-right:350:[[WesternAnimation/AdventureTime Crossing dimensions]] just to smash the local SugarBowl.]]
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10->''"What this lacks in finesse, it makes up in spikes."''
11-->-- Description of the "Barbarian Mace" in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins''
12
13Something about taking a simple club and adding a whole bunch of spikes on it makes it look ten times more dangerous. Perhaps it's because it gets rid of any elegance that may be associated with other weapons, so you're left with something that screams "this was made to smash, stab, cause physical pain, and NOTHING ELSE!", making it as ObviouslyEvil as a weapon can look. The flail variants look even more dangerous by making the user able to spin and whip it around in flashy and destructive ways.
14
15In fiction, spiked clubs and flails are often used by the more unhinged and violent, with a lot of versatility in {{character archetype}}s, too. Due to the lack of elegance in its design and how simple some variants of it are to make, they are a common weapon for the standard {{Mook}} as well as the stronger SmashMook. Their primitive appearance that puts emphasis on destruction above all else makes them popular weapons for DumbMuscle types. [[PowerFist Spiky brass knuckles]] and [[BatterUp baseball bats]] are popular for stereotypical violent criminals, be it a street punk, biker, or mafia legbreaker. A spiked club or mace's almost cartoonishly dangerous appearance makes them a fitting weapon for stereotypically psychotic and AxCrazy characters; [[EpicFlail spiked flails]] are also a good way to emphasize their insane and erratic personality with them swinging them around. [[PowerFist Spiked gauntlets]], warhammers with a spiked hammer head and more intricate examples of a spiked club or mace (ones that don't look like somebody just stuck a bunch of nails into a piece of wood) aren't uncommon to see being used by evil [[TinTyrant knights]] or noblemen, and at times EvilOverlord characters. Its savage design also makes it popular for stereotypical barbarian characters, whether it be for {{Mook}}s in a BarbarianTribe or a BarbarianHero. If a heroic character wields it, they are usually a [[BloodKnight a brawler who loves a good fight]] and/or [[GoodIsNotNice a more mean and unpleasant character]].
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17While normally associated with [[CarryABigStick clubs or maces]] and [[EpicFlail flails]]. The trope also sees itself crossing over from time to time with war hammers. As the spikes on the flat broad ends of the hammerhead can just outright make them look like giant meat tenderizers, thus even more savage than a warhammer can already be. Although even then, meat tenderizers in of themselves make good weapons for those whom need to [[ImprovisedWeapon improvise on the fly]] or for those meat-obsessed psychos.[[note]][[ImAHumanitarian Cannibalism]], ToServeMan and TheSecretOfLongPorkPies tropes. May or may not be required.[[/note]]
18
19Fiction set in the modern era uses [[BatterUp baseball bats]]/wood planks/{{Two By Fore}}s with nails or other spiky sharp objects then rammed, attached or nailed through or to them. Thanks to the prevalence of ZombieApocalypse fiction, these weapons became very popular, despite their [[AwesomeYetImpractical impracticality]]. They definitely look intimidating and [[RuleOfCool cool]]. They can appear in the hands of both heroic survivors or evil raiders/bandits. Although usually whoever carries these savage whackers is depicted as being eager to bust some heads (both undead and living). Another practice is just having barbed-wire wrapped around it.[[note]]Thank [[Franchise/TheWalkingDead a certain popular character from a piece of zombie fiction]] for that.[[/note]]
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21Such weapons are very much TruthInTelevision. However rather than pure intimidation, such projections helped contend with plate armor in much the same way as hammers: by allowing the energy of the blow to be focused on a smaller point. Ironically, the spiked flail commonly found in fiction never actually existed during TheMiddleAges in {{UsefulNotes/Europe}}. This was instead a distinct weapon called the morning star, which evolved from the club.
22
23By its very nature, examples of this trope usually crossover with BrutishCharacterBrutishWeapon, CarryABigStick, EpicFlail, BatterUp, and PowerFist. Common character archetypes seen with these include {{Mook}}, SmashMook, DumbMuscle, TheBrute, AxCrazy, TheBerserker, and BloodKnight. For more tropes on weapons reflecting a character's personality, see RoyalRapier, SinisterSwitchblade, KnightlySwordAndShield and GoodWeaponEvilWeapon. Related to SerratedBladeOfPain and BoulderBludgeon, and some examples/the general concept of this trope could almost be considered a combination of the two. May count as an ImprovisedWeapon depending on the quality of the weapon and/or circumstances of it's use. PrimitiveClubs, where strong but crude bludgeons are used to communicate that a character is primitive and barbaric, thusly is a sister trope. See also SpikesOfVillainy, SpikesOfDoom, SpikeBallsOfDoom and ToughSpikesAndStuds for other spike-related tropes.
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25----
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27!!Examples
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29[[foldercontrol]]
30
31[[folder:Anime And Manga]]
32* ''{{Manga/Berserk}}''
33** One of the Blue Whale Knights' most powerful warriors, Samson Coborlwitz is a hulking giant of a man who fights with a spiky EpicFlail. Despite being themed around an anglerfish, he's not very bright, but he more than makes up for this with his [[DumbMuscle strength]] and [[TheBerserker ferocity]]. Not that it does him much good against Guts.
34* ''Manga/{{Gamaran}}'': the Maruyama Brothers are a trio of cruel warriors whose infamy comes from their habit to inflict a gruesome FamilyUnfriendlyDeath to anyone they face with their "Murderous Swords". The third brother, Kozo, carries the blade known as "Kurotsuji" (Black Crossing), a nodachi whose blade is viciously barbed so to inflict as much pain as possible.
35* Kaido, an enormous {{Oni}}-like man considered to be the "strongest creature" in the world of ''Manga/OnePiece'' and one member of the series' BigBadEnsemble, carries a spiked club. [[spoiler:He's fast and strong enough with it to defeat [[TheHero Luffy]] in ''one strike''.]] [[spoiler:His son, Yamato, uses a similar club called "Takeru" but just to show how morally better Yamato is, Takeru doesn't have spikes, only blunt studs.]]
36* ''Manga/SaintSeiya'': Dante, Silver Saint of Cerberus, is TheBrute who mainly fights using massive flails tipped with huge, spiked orbs.
37[[/folder]]
38
39[[folder:Comic Books]]
40* In ''ComicBook/{{Asterix}} and the Goths'', the side story of "The Asterixian Wars" begins with a brief introduction to this many-sided conflict, with a few black-and-white illustrations which include the "favourite and devastating weapon of the combatants": a spiked wooden club. This leads to panel after panel of one Goth (or several) smashing another Goth over the head with this type of weapon.
41* ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'': Turning hands into spike covered balls was a common tactic for members of the [[Franchise/{{Batman}} Clayface family]].
42* ''ComicBook/HackSlash'': The NinetiesAntiHero Cassie Hack's signature weapon is a [[BatterUp baseball bat with nails hammered into it]] (and "KISS THIS" written on it).
43* Spiked maces are the signature weapon of the ''{{ComicBook/Hawkman}}'' family, with the first Hawkman (Carter Hall) being a [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold grumpy and violent, but still heroic, character]].
44* ''ComicBook/LukeCage'' villain [[StevenUlyssesPerhero Col. Gideon Mace]] was a Vietnam War veteran who replaced his hand with a bowling ball-sized spiked macehead after he lost his hand in combat. After he was dishonorably discharged for mental health issues, he became a [[RoaringRampageOfRevenge rage-fueled, warmongering terrorist who tried to overthrow the American government on multiple occasions]]. He's ALMOST a GeniusBruiser, but due to his [[AxCrazy extreme insanity]] and [[SmallNameBigEgo arrogance]] (he claims himself to be [[MilesGloriosus "the next Patton" and lies about his military accomplishments all the time]]), he's not as big of a threat as he could be.
45* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'' foe Sandman often uses brute force and nothing else in a fight, and would usually morph his hands into spiked bludgeons or sledgehammer heads made of solid sandstone.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Fan Works]]
49* ''Fanfic/BlessedWithAHerosHeart'': In his efforts to try and help his party members become more competent fighters, Izuku gives Darkness an Iron Bark club with thorns, to take advantage of her strength and avoid the pesky problem of her lack of accuracy with a sword. At first she considers it "barbaric" and unfitting for a Crusader, until she tries it out on Beldia and realizes that it's pretty damn effective.
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51[[/folder]]
52
53[[folder:Films]]
54* ''Film/BillyClub2013'': In the prologue, we see Billy (presumably) hammering a bunch of nails into a baseball bat so they all stick out on one side, and carve a groove into the top into which he inserts a knife blade meant to be retractable.
55%%* ''Film/CainHill'': Chester Lockhart is usually seen carrying around a spiked [[BatterUp bat]].
56* In ''Film/ConanTheDestroyer'', Queen Taramis' bodyguard and SixthRangerTraitor Bombaata (UsefulNotes/WiltChamberlain), who can barely contain his will to kill Conan, wields a morning star-like mace with a beak.
57* ''Film/{{Excalibur}}'' has some examples:
58** One of the weapons Arthur uses during his first battle with Lancelot is a spiked mace, which accentuates his insane rage during the scene (Lancelot even points out that Arthur is willing to kill a man that isn't even his enemy).
59** [[spoiler:Lancelot]] plays with this trope during the final battle where [[spoiler: he arrives and uses a spiked club as his main weapon. While Lancelot isn't a stereotypically barbaric or lower class character, he LOOKS the part after spending years in exile, and getting a more stereotypically brutish and primitive looking weapon like a spiked club rather than a more stereotypically refined and elegant looking weapon like the sword he previously used might be a way to emphasize his [[FallenHero fall from grace]].]]
60* ''Film/TheKunoichiNinjaGirl'': Shimotsuki uses a pair of [[PowerFist spiked knuckledusters]] to discipline Kanna. He even warns her not to move while he is hitting her because, if she does, he might hit a major organ and his aim is to punish her, not kill her.
61* ''Film/MadMax2TheRoadWarrior'': During the final battle, after Lord Humungus unshackles the hate-filled Wez and gives him the OK to attack Max, Wez climbs on Max's truck with a spiky flail he made out of scrap metal and [[TheBerserker just starts wailing on the windshield and roof of the cab in an attempt to kill Max and The Feral Kid]].
62[[/folder]]
63
64[[folder:Gamebooks]]
65* ''Literature/FightingFantasy'': Facing something spiked and painful is a given when your character has to face beings like Chaos Warriors and whatnot. An example is in ''Literature/TrialOfChampions'', you fight a Chaos Champion who's trying to brain you with a large spiked mace.
66* ''Literature/ForbiddenGateway'': ''Where the Shadows Stalk'' has an encounter where your character dreams that a druid priest tells you of the evil you face and will aid you. You wake up to find your [[CarryABigStick knobkerrie]] now has a metal spike protruding out of it to cause extra damage during a fight.
67* ''Literature/LoneWolf'': the Drakkarim melee arsenal use this as a rule of thumb: when it's not a blade to give serrated edges to, then it's something to adorn with more spikes. They are literally a race of BloodKnight soldiers.
68[[/folder]]
69
70[[folder:Literature]]
71* ''Literature/FengshenYanyi'':
72** Feng Lin, the muscle-bound general working for Zhang Guifang, one of the first generals sent against the town of Xiqi, is a straight-forward brute who employs two Wolf-Teeth Clubs in combat with great skills.
73** One of the Four Generals serving the traitorous prince Yin Jiao uses a similar trick and, like Feng Lin, is a barbaric fighter with no technique nor finesse.
74** Coupled with PrimitiveClubs, the giant Wu Wenhua uses a colossal cudgel carved from a single tree and adorned with huge spikes, mentioned when he first swings the weapon at his opponent and misses, the spikes embedding themselves for over three feet into the ground.
75* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'': Robert Baratheon was famous for wielding a huge spiked warhammer. It was with this weapon that he killed the heir to the throne, Prince Rhaegar Targaryen.
76[[/folder]]
77
78[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
79* ''Series/{{Highlander}}'': Several particularly nasty Immortals have swords with hand guards or pommels that are customized with spikes for up close damage. The most notable case is probably Kronos of The Four Horsemen, who has a hand-and-a-half sword overengineered with large, curved quillions and a big pommel, all decorated with assorted spikes and pokey bits. Even the blade has spikes that line up with the tips of the quillions. Not only does it look exactly like the weapon of an Immortal so evil he made his way into the Bible as a harbinger of the Apocalypse would use, it has practical use. The blade spikes and curved quillions form a pocket good for trapping an opponent's blade then disarming them, and the heavy pommel not only balances the bulky weapon, but provides a useful bludgeon for infighting.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:Mythology and Religion]]
83* To emphasize their brutality and power, the weapon of choice for the ''{{Oni}}'' in Japanese folklore are kanabo, [[CarryABigStick massive clubs covered in metal studs or spikes]].
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:Toys]]
87* ''Toys/{{BIONICLE}}'': The EliteMook Stronius carries a large spiked {{Primitive Club|s}} and his armor is covered in spikes as well.
88* The original action figures for the caveman-esque Slash and borderline feral Tokka in the ''Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles'' toyline included primitive looking spiky maces as accessories.
89* ''Franchise/TheTransformers'': The G1 Headmaster character Squeezeplay uses a spiked mace as a weapon. His motto is "[[DumbMuscle place brawn before brains]]''. Amusingly, he's actually fairly smart and not particularly strong.
90[[/folder]]
91
92[[folder:Video Games]]
93* In ''VideoGame/CastleCrashers'', the barbarian enemies and demon enemies commonly wield spiky, dark-colored maces to compliment their barbaric and evil backgrounds.
94* ''VideoGame/ConquerorsBlade'' features a set of Mongolian-themed barbarian units that include Tseregs, footsoldiers armed with spiked war clubs.
95* In ''VideoGame/DarkDevotion'', Hezek the Baptized is a brutish berserker who wields a spiked cudgel.
96* Several examples in the ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'' series as a whole, such as the Morningstar, which deals Strike damage and causes Bleed build-up, but one of the most noteworthy examples of this is the equipment of Kirk, Knight of Thorns, as all his items, from his armor and sword to even his shield, are all covered in vicious spikes with the intention of causing bleeding by either striking the foe or rolling into them.
97* The first weapon that can be crafted in ''VideoGame/{{Darkwood}}'' is the “Board with Nails.” It can also be upgraded by hammering even more nails into it, increasing its damage.
98* An early weapon that can be found in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'' is the Barbarian Mace. The weapon's description says "What this lacks in finesse, it makes up in spikes." A few other spiked mace and maul type weapons can be found in the game. They universally have lower outright damage or crit chances than swords or axes, but they bypass an enemy's armor with ease.
99* In ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'', "this item menaces with spikes of [=[insert material]=]" is one of the descriptions that can be added to a weapon decorated with a metal or a gemstone.
100* In ''VideoGame/EternalChampions'', the character roster were plucked form all periods of time. Primitive Caveman character Slash wields a large spiked club, signifying his origins from Earth's brutal, pre-historic past.
101* The two weakest and most common enemies in ''VideoGame/GoldenAxe'' carry a spiked mace and spiked club, and the savage Minotaur boss from the sequel wields a large one.
102* ''VideoGame/GreyAnAlienDream'': One of [[PlayerCharacter Grey's]] weapons is a [[BatterUp baseball bat]] with nails in it.
103* ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheRound'' has a lot of examples of this with their enemies and bosses, with the barbaric looking "Buster Knight" enemies carrying spiky clubs to compliment their [[SpikesOfVillainy spiked shields, spiky shoulderpads, and horned helmets]] the gigantic, even more barbaric looking boss Balbars carrying an absolutely enormous spiked hammer ("The Hammer" is even his RedBaron), one of the last bosses is "The Iron Golem" a giant marionette made from pieces of oversized knight armor who has SpikeBallsOfDoom for hands, and has very little means of attack aside from "try to smash you", [[TinTyrant Arlon]] wields a [[CarryABigStick spiked mace]] and [[PowerFist spiked knuckleduster]], and due to being a PaletteSwap of Arlon, the final boss [[EvilOverlord Garibaldi]] also wields a spiked mace (he trades in the knuckleduster for magic rings).
104* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaBreathOfTheWild'': Ganon's minions tend to favor weapons covered in spikes and barbs.
105** [[OurGoblinsAreDifferent Bokoblins]] and [[OurOrcsAreDifferent moblins]] have a fascination for adding spikes to their weapons to make them deadlier. This includes weapons where it makes no sense at all, such as bows, and descriptions of these items lampshade this.
106--->''"After much consideration by bokoblins on how to improve the boko bat, they simply attached sharp spikes to it."''
107** {{Liza|rdFolk}}lfos makes use of boomerangs and spears with blades covered in hooked barbs and jagged edges. Their Compendium entries note this and warn about the grievous wounds that can be inflicted by their ripping blades.
108* ''VideoGame/MegaMan6'': Knight Man, one of the eight Robot Masters, sports a spiked ball with a chain as his main weapon. Also, diverse HumongousMecha bosses from [[VideoGame/MegaManClassic the series]] have this kind of weapon as part of their arsenal.
109* ''VideoGame/{{Omori}}'': [[spoiler:Aubrey's real self]] often carries a nailed bat as of late, and is much more mean and punkish than she used to be.
110* ''VideoGame/PaperMario'' marked the first appearance of a spiked mace wielding Spike subspecies called Clubba. They guarded Tubba Blubba's castle and were not very quick-witted.
111* ''VideoGame/Persona5'': Zigzagged. Ryuji often carries {{Improvised Weapon}}s like [[BatterUp spiked bats]] into battle and is the rowdiest person on the team. But underneath his insensitive, rough exterior, he's a forgiving NiceGuy with overwhelming loyalty to his friends.
112* ''VideoGame/SaintsRow'': Baseball bats have been present since the first game, but in ''VideoGame/SaintsRowTheThird'' you are given the option to upgrade the bat's damage by giving it railroad spikes and chains. In ''VideoGame/SaintsRowIV'', the upgrades are separate from the asthetic and among the bat skins you can chose there are three spiked versions: a standard one, one that has a new bat and shiny spikes, or one that has a moldy bat and rusted spikes.
113* ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':
114** ''VideoGame/SonicMania'': The maniacal Heavy Rider unpredictably rides around at breakneck speed swinging a massive spiky flail around during her boss fight in Lava Reef Zone.
115** The [[https://sonic.sega.jp/SonicChannel/enjoy/ Sonic Channel]] website features an artwork of Knuckles the Echidna [[https://sonic.sega.jp/SonicChannel/enjoy/image/wallpaper_207_knuckles_16_pc.png with a spiked club]]. Knuckles is also a short-tempered brawler who hails from a tribe of warrior echidnas.
116* ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'' has some examples:
117** "The Boston Basher", a [[CarryABigStick medieval club]] reinforced by metal bars with metal spikes on them that [[BloodKnight the cocky and fight-loving Scout]] can use, which causes bleeding in addition to damage with every hit, [[AwesomeButImpractical but with every miss Scout hits himself]]
118** the [[TheBigGuy large, muscular Heavy]] who uses his fists for melee combat can obtain a pair of organized crime-inspired, [[PowerFist spike-covered brass knuckles]] called "The Eviction Notice" (ironically, this actually does LESS damage than his normal punch attack, as it speeds him up instead)
119** The warmongering, AxCrazy Soldier and the ViolentGlaswegian Demoman can equip "The Pain Train", a very savage-looking ImprovisedWeapon consisting of a cracked piece of wood with a railroad spike jammed through it held together by duct tape.
120* ''{{VideoGame/Valheim}}'': Though it's not seen on the model, the very first club is upgraded by means of adding bone fragments to it. The Porcupine is a high-level mace made with Deathsquito needles.
121* ''VideoGame/XMen'': The [[FatBastard obese]], [[TheBrute brutish]], and [[DumbMuscle not incredibly bright]] Blob carries a spiked mace during his boss fights.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Western Animation]]
125* ''WesternAnimation/{{Amphibia}}'': Polly Plantar is a maniacally skilled user of a giant spiked morningstar. She happens to be tadpole.
126* ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'': The Nightbrothers, a clan of barbarians from the Dark Side-infused world of Dathomir, fight with axes and spears with jagged blades and with maces bristling with metal spikes.
127* ''WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2012'': After [[spoiler:Spike mutates into Slash]], he chooses an absolutely enormous spiked mace as a weapon, to emphasize his brutal, violent, and no-nonsense approach to fighting.
128* ''WesternAnimation/{{Villainous|CartoonNetwork}}'': [[AxCrazy The destruction-loving Demencia's]] second favorite weapon is a spiked mace, right after [[MeetMyGoodFriendsLeftyAndRighty Bonebreaker and Nutcracker]]
129[[/folder]]
130
131[[folder:Real Life]]
132* Several such weapons appeared in {{UsefulNotes/Europe}} during the TheLateMiddleAges:
133** The most common type was the mace itself, which evolved from a plain metal ball or cylinder, with the addition [[https://i.pinimg.com/736x/c4/fa/6d/c4fa6de6dd2dad0cbd0ce9ada1f7744c.jpg flanges]] or [[https://swordmaster.org/uploads/2009/figthtofight/palici.jpg knobs]]. As noted above, this helped make them more effective against rigid plate armor.
134** There was also the morning star, which is the weapon ''actually'' commonly depicted in fiction, as the mace itself never developed true spikes. The morning star was a distinct weapon that evolved from the club, and featured a spiked metal head fixed to a wooden shaft.[[note]]By the time the morning star appeared, the mace had largely transitioned to an all-metal construction.[[/note]]
135* In {{UsefulNotes/Asia}}, we have several spiked weapons as well.
136** In {{UsefulNotes/China}}, we have the [[https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0014/3002/8375/products/W075_600x600.jpg?v=1579891458 Wolf's Tooth Mace]], which is a heavy, cylindrical metal head on a long pole which is lined with spikes.
137** The Japanese [[https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a1/Nanhoku-cho_period_samurai_from_%22Military_Costumes_in_Old_Japan%22%2C_1893.jpg kanabo]] is the Samurai's answer to BatterUp: while the business end of the weapon can be bare, it can also be lined with spike or studs that can increase its ability to smash through armor.
138* This trope was invoked in Italian pro-war propaganda pictures at the time of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI: Austrian soldiers were demonized as inhuman barbarians clubbing Italian soldiers (made harmless by gas attacks) with large spiked clubs.
139* In June 2020, clashes between Indian and Chinese soldiers broke out in the contested Galwan border region that led to dozens of deaths. Due to [[https://archive.ph/JNINW prior agreements signed by both sides]] prohibiting soldiers from "opening fire" in this area, all soldiers stationed there have been disarmed of firearms for over 2 decades, which meant the fighting was all done with melee weapons or bare hands. Indian journalists published reports claiming one of the weapons the Chinese troops used were [[https://twitter.com/ajaishukla/status/1273478468919951361 nail-studded wooden rods]].
140[[/folder]]

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