This is actually a pretty decent and credible depiction of a large-scale (quasi-)Medieval battle, nobody wearing their damn helmets aside. I'm rather positively surprised. Wonder if the author is a
fellow raging nerdmilitary history hobbyist...?
If anything the main flag of disbelief is Olivia's flanking force having reached position on schedule instead of getting tangled up in undergrowth or straight up lost and only arriving after the battle was already decided, as only too often occurred when such maneuvers were attempted IRL. 🤣
@Ainzell Because high birth and connections trump competence in aristocratic class societies, that's why. Premodern (and only too large portions of
modern) military history is depressingly rife with socially superior twats overriding or ignoring more competent leaders of lesser status and snatching defeat from the jaws of victory, or just plain wasting whole armies.
Kind of happens when status equaled power, military forces were at least as much private as "national" and there was no organised system for training officers and at least
trying to ensure a certain minimum baseline level of leadership competence.