


In Kuromukuro, Kennosuke, a samurai from the Sengoku Jidai, has a laser-edged katana that he took from an ogre.Yaiba has Gold, who can apparently heat up his gargantuan Sinister Scimitar somehow.There's also Shura from the same arc who uses a Heat Javelin, a Jousting Lance with a Heat Dial inside it that lets him stab and burn things simultaneously.He also uses it to quickly reshape said trident(it was originally just a golden staff). In One Piece Enel does a variation by using his electric powers to turn his trident into molten metal in order to burn Luffy, who's immune to direct attack by Enel's lightning.Lupin III: one episode (also adapted to the anime) implies that the secret of Goemon's impossibly sharp Nagareboshi/Zantetsuken lies in both its temperature: apparently the katana is eeriely hot, which might explain its ability to cut through anything.Captain Yamamoto's Bankai Seems to be this, along with a fullbody flame armor.Filler Villain Shusuke Amagai's Zankpaktou has this when its hilt spouts flame.In the battle at the sea in Berserk, Schierke's fire magic was used to turn Guts' Dragonslayer into one of these.

#Deepest sword hot manual
You think its because a heat hawk blade would by necessity have a higher melting point than the Zaku's armor before you know that the All There in the Manual tells you the blade of the heat weapon is actually plasmarized and maintained its form (thus they are just lesser example of beam weapons with lower tech). At one point in the original series, a heat hawk is able to briefly parry the Gundam's beam saber, which is formed from superheated plasma.

Another well-known example is Gundam Sandrock's heat shotels, which become ludicrously huge in Endless Waltz. In the Gundam franchise, the next step down from Energy Weapons like beam sabers is heat weapons, the most iconic of which is the Zaku II's heat hawk.Its more fantasy-oriented counterpart is the Flaming Sword a hot blade retains a touch of Playing with Fire while requiring less Willing Suspension of Disbelief. Hot blades are more common in a Science Fiction setting. A more advanced weapon is the Laser Blade, where the blade is made of Pure Energy instead of just adding (heat) energy to a physical blade. You could use some kind of material that can withstand the temperatures the intended heat blade will reach, such as a tungsten alloy or ceramic, but there will be tradeoffs based on the strengths and weaknesses of the chosen material.) because Power Glows.Ĭompare Vibroweapon, which uses extremely rapid vibrations instead of heat to enhance its cutting power. When active, it will usually glow visibly (without losing any of its structural integrity, somehow explanation Steel-based blades will have any heat treatment ruined after exposure to such heated-blade usage, and if you get it glowing hot it will also become malleable and easily deformed, as any blacksmith knows. A hot blade is an edged weapon that somehow heats up, adding the thermal energy of its temperature to the kinetic energy of its blow to achieve Absurd Cutting Power.
