A deadly encounter unfolds as a Navy SEAL and a samurai warrior prepare to test their skills across time. SOFREP original illustration
FX’s Shogun is a brutal, beautiful beast of a show, dripping with all the blood and honor you’d expect from a tale of samurai swords and feudal Japan.
Watching it as a former SEAL, I couldn’t help but think: “Man, if one of us got zapped back in time to this mess, we’d be nothing more than minced sushi for these katana-wielding psychopaths.”
And here’s why:
Samurai Discipline vs. Navy SEAL Instinct
Let’s get one thing straight. SEALs are trained to adapt, improvise, and survive, but samurai discipline is a whole different ballgame. These guys spent their entire lives perfecting the art of war, not just a few hellish months in BUD/S. We’re talking about generations of honor-bound murderers who lived by the blade and died by the blade. A SEAL dropped into the Edo period would last as long as a Kardashian at a MENSA meeting.
The samurai would see right through our modern tactics—stealth and deception would be met with a clean slice through the guts.
Weapons and the Weight of Tradition
Sure, SEALs are badasses with hand-to-hand but a lot of this training also involves weapons (integrated into combat), but take away our H&K MP5, cool gadgets, NVGs, and drones, and what are we left with? An Emerson folding knife and a whole lot of attitude.
Now, pit that against a samurai who’s been perfecting his swordsmanship since before your grandpa was a twinkle in his grandpa’s eye. Even if you managed to go mano-a-mano, a samurai would carve you up faster than a Tokyo sushi chef on speed.
FX’s Shogun is a brutal, beautiful beast of a show, dripping with all the blood and honor you’d expect from a tale of samurai swords and feudal Japan.
Watching it as a former SEAL, I couldn’t help but think: “Man, if one of us got zapped back in time to this mess, we’d be nothing more than minced sushi for these katana-wielding psychopaths.”
And here’s why:
Samurai Discipline vs. Navy SEAL Instinct
Let’s get one thing straight. SEALs are trained to adapt, improvise, and survive, but samurai discipline is a whole different ballgame. These guys spent their entire lives perfecting the art of war, not just a few hellish months in BUD/S. We’re talking about generations of honor-bound murderers who lived by the blade and died by the blade. A SEAL dropped into the Edo period would last as long as a Kardashian at a MENSA meeting.
The samurai would see right through our modern tactics—stealth and deception would be met with a clean slice through the guts.
Weapons and the Weight of Tradition
Sure, SEALs are badasses with hand-to-hand but a lot of this training also involves weapons (integrated into combat), but take away our H&K MP5, cool gadgets, NVGs, and drones, and what are we left with? An Emerson folding knife and a whole lot of attitude.
Now, pit that against a samurai who’s been perfecting his swordsmanship since before your grandpa was a twinkle in his grandpa’s eye. Even if you managed to go mano-a-mano, a samurai would carve you up faster than a Tokyo sushi chef on speed.
The katana isn’t just a weapon; it’s a freaking work of art, honed to a razor’s edge that can slice through bone like butter. And while a SEAL might fight dirty, the samurai would just call it another day at the office—no sweat, no fucking mercy.
After all, even if fully loaded out with bullets, you’ll get only a few shots off before you’re left slow in body armor 1V1 with only a folding knife at your disposal.
The Code of Bushido vs. SEAL Code
We SEALs live, somewhat, by a code while on active duty (don’t get me started once they leave service), but the Bushido code is on a whole different level of crazy.
Samurai didn’t just kill; they killed with purpose, with a deep-rooted philosophy that makes even the most battle-hardened SEAL look like a half-naked Dan Bilzerian holding his pet cat with a grudge.
The Bushido code demanded loyalty, honor, and a commitment to death if it meant upholding one’s principles. Try bullshitting your way out of a fight with a samurai and you’ll end up with your head on a pike. And forget about going all Terminal List and winning their respect—those guys would sooner disembowel themselves than take advice from a time-traveling American with a death wish.
Shogun isn’t just a series; it’s a full-contact reminder that sometimes, you’re better off sticking to your own time.
SEALs are built for modern warfare, not 16th-century death matches. So, if you ever find yourself in feudal Japan with limited ammunition, don’t bother with the whole “I’m a Navy SEAL” routine. You’re not in Kansas anymore, Dorothy, and those dudes don’t give a damn about your fucking combat dive log.
In the end, Shogun is a savage spectacle that reminds us that war is hell—especially when your enemies are disciplined maniacs with a thousand years of blade culture behind them.
Watch it, learn from it, but don’t get any ideas about time-traveling to the past. Because trust me, you won’t be coming back in one piece.
Also, let me know if you’ve watched the show below!
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Brandon Webb former Navy SEAL, Bestselling Author and Editor-in-Chief
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