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First, I shall explain the situation.

I have a species of humanoids, Astriads, who are already quite stronger on average than humans are. However, this difference isn't great enough to cause problems when it comes to weapon design.

Now the problem comes with the internal magic. Using the internal magic, they can greatly empower themselves. While this isn't that practical for waving heavy weapons around, for archery, this is quite a problem. Where as, say, elite English longbowman would use 140-200 lbs force bow, and according to some stories, 240 lbs bows have been used in some archery competitions worldwide, elite longbowmen with internal magic can easily generate pull force far greater, from 400 pounds up to 800 pounds of pull force, depending on how good these elites are when it comes to internal magic.

My trouble is this: How would they design their bows in order to maximise the impact of increased strength? For example: So far as I understand it(and I might be wrong), if they just went for a thicker longbow, they would not achieve much improvement over 200 lbs bows because of limits of material. So what sort of bow (without use of modern materials) do they develop to properly use most of their magically enhanced strength to their benefits?

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    $\begingroup$ What's wrong with them using ordinary steel crossbows, just without the time-consuming spanning mechanisms required by puny humans who can't span the steel bow without using ratchets or levers or other forms of mechanical advatage? An army of crossbowmen how could let fly their bolts at the same rate as Welsh archers would be invincible unless the enemy has cannon. $\endgroup$
    – AlexP
    Oct 5, 2021 at 16:42
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    $\begingroup$ @AlexP Steel crossbows aren't that strong, not compared to 200 lbs longbow. While they do have higher draw weight, their less flexible steel also leaves them with shorter draw length, vastly decreasing efficiency. Their main advantages are far easier aiming and ability to take time to aim (with bow you have to hold it drawn when taking aim) - which means that you can train crossbowman much faster than a longbowman. Even massive, ugly 1000 lbs draw force crossbows are only about on par with a really strong (180-200 lbs) longbow. $\endgroup$ Oct 5, 2021 at 16:58
  • $\begingroup$ Steel can be very versatile, strong and flexible, depending on the alloy used. A leaf spring in a vehicle is very strong and flexible and will return to the same rest position when not under load. You can make a steel frame longbow, as long as you are not using the garbage steel the French used in the middle ages. Plus, crossbows shot bolts. Not designed for range, but wold penetrate armor quite nicely. $\endgroup$
    – Sonvar
    Oct 5, 2021 at 17:46
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    $\begingroup$ Does this question answer yours? worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/9300/… or this worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/146137/… $\endgroup$
    – DWKraus
    Oct 5, 2021 at 17:52
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    $\begingroup$ Kind of wondering why not just use a spear? A bow is a force multiplier. But if your already strong enough to throw the projectile faster and further than a bow can. Then don't use a bow at all. Just a spear. And it will be even more lethal too, and can be used in mid range. $\endgroup$
    – Trevor
    Oct 6, 2021 at 20:05

5 Answers 5

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Double bow.

double bow

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8ui1irplhM

This dude is an Astriad! You can tell. And besides his might, he is a maker of awesome things and so himself magnitudes more awesome. He has made an awesome double bow with double the pull of a single bow. Thus he can leverage his magestic mightytude without requiring any unobtanium.

"But!" you sputter wetly. "But what if my people are even mightier than this bowsmith dude!". Even he would admit it might be possible, because his true might is the making of awesome things. Bowsmith dude would make the mightier dude a 3 bow bow and let mightier dude test it out in a video.

"But they are really mighty!" you retort. "Too mighty for a 3 bow bow!". One can add bows in proportion to might until the bow is an adequate match.

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    $\begingroup$ +1 for "3 bow bow". $\endgroup$
    – Daron
    Oct 5, 2021 at 18:02
  • $\begingroup$ PVC bow? Aka face scars maker :(). $\endgroup$ Oct 6, 2021 at 3:58
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    $\begingroup$ "He has made an awesome double bow with double the pull of a single bow." - "English longbowman would use 140-200 lbs force bow" - "elite longbowmen with internal magic can easily generate pull force [...] up to 800 pounds" So this is at worst just a 4-bow bow situation, nothing to dramatic! $\endgroup$
    – Nyakouai
    Oct 8, 2021 at 19:52
  • $\begingroup$ Exactly this. However you will need to also use thicker arrows, so to not break the arrow when its not stiff enough, and not break the bow when the arrow is too light for the bow speed (since multi-bowing does not increase the maximum speed) so all the excess energy gets dumped into the bow instead of the arrow. $\endgroup$
    – LazyLizard
    Jan 19 at 9:55
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They wouldn't

Let's set that straight: bows are lousy weapons. Welsh longbows are lousy and encumbering.

Throughout the middle ages in Europe there were thousands of battles. Bows were useful in only two of them, both won by the british, and this has made the longbow a sort of mythical status as a medieval uber-weapon in the english-speaking countries, just like the absurd glorification of the katana as a superior sword, or the fascination about nazi super-soldiers and super-weapons.

Bows are tools for hunting. They are good to hunt small game from short to medium distances. That's what they are good for. In battle they are next to useless, unless a certain combination of tactics and opportunity concurs.

There's a tendency in fantasy novels and visual media (movies, videogames) to depict bows as the medieval rifle - or even submachine-gun - which is another misconception. Bows were used in battle, when they were used at all, as a primitive form of field artillery. French knights could drank their wine unconcerned by a heavy rain of arrows, but medieval infantry was nothing but peasants armed with forks. Less than one of every ten of them had a shield, less than one of fifty had a sword and absolutely no-one carried any kind of armor. As a result, when in Agincourt or Crézy the welsh bowmen started shooting arrows, they were aiming to the mass of infantry downhill, not to the knights.

Because that's a problem with bows, no matter how powerful or far-reaching: the best bowmen could hit a static human-sized target at a hundred paces 50% of times. What they did was aiming at whole armies, with hundreds at a time. It was carpet-bombing, not sniping.

So the french commanders had three options: retreating from the field, allow their infantry to be massacred until they routed or charge to eliminate the bowmen threat. So they decided to charge uphill against a heavily fortified position. It was pikes, traps and trenches who defeated the french cavalry. Clever use of the bowmen may have decided those battles, but there's no proof a single knight was killed by an arrow.

Bows can be deadly weapons when used like the tribes of the steppe used them. Their bows were far superior to welsh longbows: they required less force to draw, offered comparable strength and reach, where easier to aim and, specially, could be used on horse. By loosing arrows while on the run upon a horse, mongols, huns, scitians and many other peoples of the steppes could run close to their target - otherwise, no matter how powerful the bow, you're gonna miss -, aim carefully avoiding armor and shields, injure the enemy (rarely killing) and run away unscathed.

Even then, bows were used in a war of attrition, forcing the enemy to charge and chase the mounted archers to ambush them and finish them with swords.

So, you want a superweapon for your insanely strong race of supermen? That's easy: a warhammer. If you want a ranged one, a javelin. Optionally with an atlatl for greater reach.

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  • $\begingroup$ Could also just have them throw cannonballs or other solid objects like mobile mini siege engines. $\endgroup$
    – Hearsay
    Oct 7, 2021 at 12:19
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    $\begingroup$ I think you're underestimating a little the power of bows. If 1000 people face 1000 bowmen, that bowmen hit 50% of the time and that 20% of the arrow cause dangerous injuries, you still get 100 men out of combat per volley. If you can shoot 3 volleys, that's 30% of the enemies out or worn out, which is enormous for something free of life-cost ^^. It's on top of being free of engagment rules (I mean having at most X opponents attacking you at once considering attack range) melee has. It leads to lots of tactical choices you don't have with just regular armies. $\endgroup$ Oct 7, 2021 at 22:46
  • $\begingroup$ @Tortliena 50% of the time against static targets. If 1000 soldiers attack 1000 archers, by the time the arrows hit the ground the soldiers aren't there anymore, so zero kills. If they shoot flat on close range, they could kill many people in the front line (we're assuming no one has shields) but the rest would fall upon the bowmen before they can change their bows for real war weapons and would be cut to pieces. Bows were a useful tactical tool: they were used to force the enemy to move, either away from you, or to attack you, but the actual battle was fought with other weapons. $\endgroup$
    – Rekesoft
    Oct 8, 2021 at 7:03
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    $\begingroup$ @Rekesoft Remember we are talking about something the size of an army, with people capable of leading their aim where their target will be, even if very roughly. Also, of course you don't let your archers get attacked on the front, that's a silly strategy relying on one single troop type to dominate the battle :p. Dominant strategies usually rely on the variety of their units to get the best of their qualities and compensate each other's weaknesses. And archers had many times their places among this variety, as much as other footmen. $\endgroup$ Oct 8, 2021 at 7:32
  • $\begingroup$ In any case, I believe that the penetrating force would be enough to crush even armored opponents if the mages have 4 times the strength of a normal human, so the conditions are changed compared to normal archery. That is, if we can find a way to convert such muscle power with bows ^^'. $\endgroup$ Oct 8, 2021 at 7:39
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Ballistas

Since your goal is to maximize power, let's think big, increase the weight of the arrows through both size and material so that it could hardly be considered as regular bow ammunitions, and use the power of ballistas to throw them at the enemy.

Ballistas are normally siege weapons, rarely used in field battles. This is notably due to the fact that you needed several crew to man it properly along regular maintenance, for a slow rate of fire (comparatively to bows).

However, with someone with quadrupled strength, you only need one person to reload and shoot, something which would be done much faster and with much less efforts, leading to really strong shots further away, with very high probably chance of killing anything at the point of impact.

Unfortunately, field repairs will be inevitable, but at this level of strength, most kind of mono-string bows1 will need repairs anyway. Indeed, even if they do not break, the components will probably irreversibly bend at the point the draw force is exerted. To counteract this, the ballista could be manned by teams of two mages, alternating between reloading and aiming/repairing as one needs to restore their magic.

Alternatively, miniature-ballistas could be made, something between normal ones and crossbows/bows. They could be set on a foot for the same purpose you lay down heavy-machine-gun, ensuring stability while you manipulate them. It's making them more of a one fighter weapon, where it reduces the maintenance needed through slightly reduced power output. At the same time, you can aim and reload without moving out of your position and for longer periods of time (it's easier on the muscles). Finally, miniature-ballistas would be much easier to manipulate without springs if you don't wish to reload them in the manner of a crossbow.


1 : Of course, if you favor damage bursts and multitargeting over raw destructive strength, multishot bows should probably be your favorite choice. Just don't forget that these kinds of apparel are not really much faster on the long term, as the reloading is often more complex and mostly improve how many times you have to shoot per ammo, which is not the lengthiest part when shooting quick.

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Your super archers would use a bow with higher draw weight. What you want is pretty much a bow part of a crossbow, just without frame. Alternatively, you may get crossbows with even higher draw strength.

How would you get that draw strength? If those people are taller than human, they may use slightly longer straight bows, as that will give them a bit more force. But a better option would be to make composite bows. A composite bow is a bow made from different materials glued together so it can have as much draw strength as needed, what's more, they can be finely tuned to the user's strength. Composite bow was traditionally made from wood with pieces of sniew and horn. Horn parts were placed where compressive forces affected the bow and sinew allover but mostly in places where stretching forces applied. Composite bows had one massive drawback - glues used were relatively easily dissolved in damp conditions, so they need to be protected from moisture and could even fall apart in very damp areas.

Fun fact: good quality welsh longbows were in fact natural composites - they were cut from the area of yew where heartwood and sapwood meet. One of those is resistant to compression and the other to stretch, same principle as in glued composite bows.

Composite bows may be straight bow (ancient Egyptians used those), more efficient recurve bow or even reflex bow. The latter types are more efficient because they can store the same amount of energy in a much shorter frame, making it easier to handle and more useful on horseback. Also, skilled bow maker can fine tune the energy store and release curve in those bows.

The other alternative would be to use metal bow. It was used already for high draw medieval crossbows and may be useful for the strongest of your people.

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I love magic tags..

Use magic to create the bow

Suppose you know how much force your super human archer can apply. Then design the appropriate light weight, proper sized material using this,

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bending_stiffness

after studying this

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler%E2%80%93Bernoulli_beam_theory

.. and ask your Magus to create a good stick of that material, and.. a string (chord) of some magic substance that is able to hold the pull and force of the bow.. then, materialize solid steel arrows, and you'll have a nice long range !

A telescope visor would come in handy.

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