Tittus & Gurza
You ever try turning a broken piece of gear into a weapon that can hold its own in a fight? I’m curious how you’d do it with honor and what you’d keep in mind.
Use the frame of the gear as the shaft, sharpen one end with a stone or the edge of a broken nail. Wrap the handle in duct tape for a good grip. Honor it by keeping it simple, no trick‑knives or hidden blades—just a straight, solid point you can swing. Don't waste what you have; if it can hold a point, it can hold a fight.
That sounds about right. A straight, honest blade—no fancy tricks. Keep it sharp, keep it true, and you’ll have a weapon that honors both the craft and the code.
Yeah. Make sure the handle stays firm and the edge never loses its angle. That’s the only way it’ll honor the job.
A steady grip and a true edge keep a blade honest. I’d polish it daily, so it never falters in a fight.
Polish it in the same way you would clean a fire pit—one scratch at a time and nothing left behind. That’s how you keep it honest.