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- Jun 16, 2018
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@welcome2atlantis - This is really late for me to respond. I'm really behind in my manga follows. But I hope you don't mind me responding to your question. I just really appreciate seeing this depiction. While I can't say this chapter elevates this manga that far up, I will give credit where credit is due. The battle seems to be replicating the Battle of Leuctra.
You're not wrong that it just two mass of infantry charging each up other the front. But that formation destroyed the Spartans. Traditionally, armies just line up infantry. Calvary will mass up the flanks. Infantry would just be a solid line of men. And each side would put their best men on their right. The winner is thus relys on numbers and collective endurance on who can grind it out longer as everyone proportionally battle it out. You might think that's a dumb tradition - why not more maneuvering of units or taking advantage of terrain or etc? Well, trying to coordinate and communicate orders to thousands of soldiers is really hard. Unlike a video game, you can't just direct a unit to move to flank or reinforce. You only communicate so much with banners and horns too. So many armies build up a formula and everyone know their role to play.
But I digressed, the strategy is they are essentially making a stacked side. The idea is by having one side overloaded with that much more men than the enemy, then it should act like a weighted sledgehammer - smashing through by the sheer concentration of men. Kinda like punching with all the weight with a strong left hook while the enemy expects a balanced attack. While the IRL Battle of Leuctra does makes this idea seem unstoppable. I will say it is also just as possible that weakened center and right flank can fail before the overloaded left flank can overwhelm.
So yeah, it doesn't look like a lot of strategy as it is just everyone charging up the front. But in this case, the innovation is not the maneuvering but in the formation. I don't know how it looks in the next chapter, but for this chapter, I do appreciate that it seems to be pulling from real tactics and in a grounded way. Tons of Isekai seems to rely on OP powers (and I know this probably will too). The slightly better ones actually using the premise which means the MC using modern knowledge or skill for an advantage, but far too many ignore that not just any modern person can know how to make gunpowder or getting soldiers to do some kind of super clever maneuver that IRL requires an army with a certain culture and training to pull it off. This chapter is actually fitting to the context of the setting. So I appreciate it.
Now onward for me to the next chapter where it probably going to return to the BS surprise cannon or OP strength or something.
You're not wrong that it just two mass of infantry charging each up other the front. But that formation destroyed the Spartans. Traditionally, armies just line up infantry. Calvary will mass up the flanks. Infantry would just be a solid line of men. And each side would put their best men on their right. The winner is thus relys on numbers and collective endurance on who can grind it out longer as everyone proportionally battle it out. You might think that's a dumb tradition - why not more maneuvering of units or taking advantage of terrain or etc? Well, trying to coordinate and communicate orders to thousands of soldiers is really hard. Unlike a video game, you can't just direct a unit to move to flank or reinforce. You only communicate so much with banners and horns too. So many armies build up a formula and everyone know their role to play.
But I digressed, the strategy is they are essentially making a stacked side. The idea is by having one side overloaded with that much more men than the enemy, then it should act like a weighted sledgehammer - smashing through by the sheer concentration of men. Kinda like punching with all the weight with a strong left hook while the enemy expects a balanced attack. While the IRL Battle of Leuctra does makes this idea seem unstoppable. I will say it is also just as possible that weakened center and right flank can fail before the overloaded left flank can overwhelm.
So yeah, it doesn't look like a lot of strategy as it is just everyone charging up the front. But in this case, the innovation is not the maneuvering but in the formation. I don't know how it looks in the next chapter, but for this chapter, I do appreciate that it seems to be pulling from real tactics and in a grounded way. Tons of Isekai seems to rely on OP powers (and I know this probably will too). The slightly better ones actually using the premise which means the MC using modern knowledge or skill for an advantage, but far too many ignore that not just any modern person can know how to make gunpowder or getting soldiers to do some kind of super clever maneuver that IRL requires an army with a certain culture and training to pull it off. This chapter is actually fitting to the context of the setting. So I appreciate it.
Now onward for me to the next chapter where it probably going to return to the BS surprise cannon or OP strength or something.