So you're going to use real world comparisons to justify 1 metal being useless, but never use real world comparisons for any other metals? That's inconsistent, we should at least continue the analogy if we're going to do that...
obligatory: Of course, we can't really use real world comparisons because technically this is just a game and it doesn't apply here.
BUT, if we did:
Why is bron useless? Bronze is a highly capable metal and better than Cuprum (copper) from which it is made in EVERY SINGLE WAY. Bron should be comparable to Steel in durability(maybe higher if you consider bronze doesn't rust, early iron/steel does terribly)& slash/pierce with higher blunt dmg & weight. In the early iron age, bronze was not moved away from because iron was better than bronze(that is a popular historical myth) at that stage, it was because civilizations were having a harder and harder time to source tin with the breakdown of major trade-networks following the Bronze Age collapse. We only ever get widespread steel that is superior to bronze (there were some areas that had pockets of highly skilled iron workers making much more advanced iron, but it was a niche skill & never took off for many reasons) much much later, which we could say is comparable to tung-steel.
If we were going by real world comparisons, bleck(tin) & cuprum(copper) & pig iron (wrought-iron) should be the only (mostly) useless metals (cuprum should be the best of the 3 of course, and should be better at least comparable to ANYTHING made of organic material/stone/bone etc) . Everything else should be within a couple points of each other, with some variation in weight/dura.
Again, I don't think any of this as relevant because this is a game-- but, I'm just saying, if we're going with real world comparisons the inconsistencies are no less jarring.
When you're looking at blunt weapons or mass based weapons, you want heavy and ideally hard. So Copper actually makes a pretty solid (no pun intended) mace head material. Bronze is slightly better because it is harder. But then there is Messing which is close to brass, again harder than bronze but lighter so it is a trade off.
Then you have steel, which is a mild steel, tends to rust and doesnt keep an edge very well. Tungsteel which is a high carbon steel, be it damascas steel, a harder steel better in many ways over mild steel. Then you have Cronite which is stainless steel or a spring steel. And lastly oghmium which I believe is completely mythical... but could be closer to a super stainless steel, which is a real thing.
But realism went out the window when we can make a full suit of armor out of teeth....