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When ammunition ran dry and the fighting collapsed into arm’s-length chaos, British soldiers reached for a weapon that looked more medieval than modern: the No.4 spike bayonet. Crude, cheap, and deliberately ugly, it was never meant to impress—only to kill. Introduced with the Lee-Enfield No.4 rifle, the spike bayonet abandoned the traditional blade entirely. Instead, it used a simple steel spike, designed purely for thrusting. There was no edge to sharpen, no finesse to master. In close combat, it punched through thick uniforms, webbing, and even bone with terrifying efficiency. German troops quickly learned that facing British infantry with fixed spikes meant a fight that would not be elegant or restrained—it would be fast, violent, and final. British training reinforced this brutality. Bayonet drills emphasized aggression, speed, and total commitment. The goal was not fencing—it was shock. When the spike went on, it signaled that the fight had entered its most dangerous phase, where hesitation meant death. This video explores why Britain deliberately chose such a primitive design, how the No.4 spike was actually used in real combat, and why German soldiers feared it despite its simplicity. In a war of tanks, aircraft, and machine guns, this ancient-looking weapon still ruled the moment when everything else failed.