FIGHT CLUB
Viral armored medieval combat sport makes brutal debut in San Antonio

Yes, the swords used in Armored Medieval Martial Arts are real.
It’s not a Renaissance Fair fever dream, nor a sketch left on the Saturday Night Live cutting floor. Armored Medieval Martial Arts (AMMA) — a viral combat sport combining ancient weapons and modern octagon-shaped cages — is a real thing. And it’s coming to San Antonio’s Boeing Center at Tech Port on September 13.
The bloodthirsty spectacle has roots in the play combat developed by the Society for Creative Anachronism (SCA), an international organization devoted to re-enacting Medieval life, or at least the more sanitary parts. Nashville couple Mickey Gallus and Kelsey Leta turned the SCA's historically accurate fights up a notch by incorporating elements of mixed martial arts.
AMMA shares some of the Medieval Times pageantry of its predecessor, but is not a form of LARPing (Live Action Roleplay) — a somewhat nerdy weekend activity where Dungeons and Dragons-obsessed warriors frolic in parks, bopping each other with Nerf swords. The maces, axes, and shields used in AMMA are real, albeit blunted, so no actual limbs are severed.
As in Mixed Martial Arts, fighters can win by racking up the most points or by scoring a technical knockout. The matches are billed as family-friendly, but parents might consider leaving kids at home less they risk their kneecaps being battered by a toddler knight.
Still, sellout crowds across the United States are buying tickets in droves and making it a social media sensation. The shows draw a rowdy audience who are eager to cheer on the clinking violence.
According to a release, this is AMMA’s first appearance in San Antonio, but armored sports aren’t entirely new to the city. There was once an active chapter of Armored Combat Worldwide, but where those fighters were amateurs, AMMA attracts professional fighters who don’t keep the brutality at bay.
Doors for the San Antonio show open at 6 pm on September 13, with the 10 matches starting at 7 pm. Tickets range from $60 for a bleacher seat to $150 for cageside passes.
