Dual Tonfas

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

The tonfa is basically a stick with a handle sticking out near one of the ends. This weapon is Boring but Practical made manifest. However, boring isn't good enough for fiction, and naturally all sorts of variations (including the the bladed tonfa, the energy beam tonfa, and the tonfa that doubles as a gun among others) have been dreamed up by writers in order to spruce up the humble handled club.

Wielded in pairs with one in each hand, a martial art based on the use of dual tonfas (Kobudo) exists in the Japanese islands of Okinawa. Archaeological evidence suggests the first tonfa were of Chinese or Indonesian origin, but they enjoyed much more widespread use in Okinawa and other Japanese islands. There it was claimed to have been developed from a a modified millstone handle as a result of the restriction of conventional weapons by the rulers of the land back in the day, forcing people to make their own weapons, often out of farm tools.

They are a staple in weapon based fighters, where they are most commonly the main weapon for one of the female characters,[1] and in any anime or manga where all kinds of weapons are already around they will often turn up somewhere down the line in the hands of a character, usually either a competent part of the hero's team or a major threat to the protagonists.

In real life, the common policeman's Nightstick is based upon this weapon, and in the end is just a modified version. It is preferred over regular batons because it is better for defense and looks less threatening. The main difference between them is that police use just one nightstick whereas with tonfas Dual-Wielding is the norm.

Examples are users unless stated otherwise.

Examples of Dual Tonfas include:

Anime and Manga

Fan Works

  • In Winter War, Takano Dan has dual tonfa as the shikai form of his zanpakutou.

Film

Live Action TV

Toys

Video Games

Web Comics

Western Animation

  • In the South Park Episode "Good Times With Weapons", Stan buys a pair of Tonfas.
  1. why male tonfa-users are the minority in fiction is unknown, since nothing about this weapon is particularly feminine, and it's popular among male martial artists in Real Life