Tim Wells (TimWellsBowhunter on YouTube) can probably take down a moose or elk with a sharpened dartboard dart propelled by a slingbow made from a hair scrunchie... I would actually be surprised if he does not do something like that one of these days.
The .36 caliber
Colt 1851 Navy had been the "farmer's best friend" for the entire duration of it's production as well as for many years afterward going right into the 20th century. It had been used for extremely humane free-range slaughtering of all manner of livestock and big game that had been brought down with a rifle but needed a 'lights out' shot, as well as efficiently dispatching all manner of predators and pests that a farm is likely to encounter on a regular basis. Texas ranchers who routinely processed rogue herds of wild cattle that had strayed across the Mexican border into their ranches used the Navy to quickly send the livestock right from the field to the icebox railcars on their way to Chicago and elsewhere without going through the abattoir, to the barely concealed dismay and objection of the abattoir operators. They are absolutely hands down one of the most stately and dependable guns that I own. I have done far more repairs, tune-ups, and modifications with the 1851 than with any other pistol as a gunsmith. The 1851 platform is literally a rough draft that can continuously be improved and made to function better using various ways.
ETA:
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What puzzles me is when all the military combatants are naked (without uniforms) how do they determine who is the enemy?
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Subtle differences in regional language, or dialects if they speak the same language, I assume. That is how many civil wars had gone down in China over the centuries, when news moved slowly and an imperial court may have collapsed but imperial armies abroad have not gotten the message yet, or they knew, but chose to go for a last ditch attempt to save the imperial lineage, usually led by generals who possessed fanatical devotion to the court from having boinked one of the imperial princesses at one time. When units have wore the same types of armor and even fielded the same banners and heraldry, somebody pretending to be a scout or even a civilian would ask the suspected enemy unit's commander a random question. They were more interested in the dialect that the target used to answer the question. If the dialect is identified as belonging to the enemy's home region in question, the pickets hidden all along the route would spring an ambush.