- Created: 400BC (Asia)
Requires training: No
Penetrates armor: yes
- Created: 1475AD (Europe)
Requires training: No
Penetrates armor: yes
At what point did arming troops with an arquebus make more sense than arming them with crossbows? What advantage(s) did old, unreliable, poorly-sighted, difficult-to-operate (keeping powder dry, tamping down gunpowder, lighting fuses, etc), early firearms offer that crossbows did not?
Obviously modern day firearms offer a huge advantage over the crossbow, but I'm not sure when (if ever) early firearms were an upgrade. Warfare is hardly one of those arenas where you field inferior equipment when a superior alternative is available, so what am I missing?