Okinawan kobudō should not be confused with the term Kobudō, which is described in the article Koryū, because the term Kobudō refers not to a weapon system but refers to a concept of moral from the feudal Japan. Less common Okinawan weapons include the tambo (short stick), the hanbō (middle length staff) and the eku (boat oar of traditional Okinawan design).
These systems can have from one to as many as a dozen weapons in their curriculum, among the rokushakubo (six foot staff, known as the 'bō'), sai (dagger-shaped truncheon), tonfa (handled club), kama (sickle), and nunchaku (chained sticks), but also the tekko (steelknuckle), tinbe-rochin (shield and spear), and surujin (weighted chain). Okinawan kobudō refers to the weapon systems of Okinawan martial arts. It is a generic term coined in the twentieth century. Okinawan kobudō is a Japanese term that can be translated as ' old martial way of Okinawa'.