I can imagine he stopped the whole army on top of a bridge as long as there's no archers nor ranged unitsYou are right but let's be honest. Faust alone is almost equal to half the army in might. if he doesn't get overwhelmed with extreme numbers I think he can solo the whole infantry tho those pesky crossbowmen will be an annoyance for him
I don't think it's that common a comparison, reality of the matter aside. It's not like people look at, say, Cloud Strife, and think Berserk-- even though I think that was the inspiration behind the Buster Sword.every work ever when they have guy with big sword "omg guys its berserk"
His entire company of soldiers are fairly elite from what we've seen.can we just talk about Helga freaking coordination?
counting more than a hundred people and categorizing them, spotting the commander, directing crossbow...
LOL nah that shi was so like, fucking funny for no reason, threatening rape to a dude who built like a panzer tank"We WILL gang rape you" took me tf out
The preceding chapter suggests that the queen may have known about the true nature of the mission and fully expected the second daughter to fail at this seemingly simple task, because the militarily prudent thing to do, and what was advised by the MMC, was to pull back and wait for the reinforcement. The queen knew that the nobles and peasants will nevertheless see that as a failure and further degrade the second princess's faction. Which is a good thing in the queen's eyes because her primary goal is to smooth the transition of power to her first daughter by making her the only choice to be the next queen. And by being not a threat, the second princess is not at risk of being assassinated or otherwise obstructed by the first princess. The only thing that might make the second princess a threat to the first princess is the MMC and this is the queen's way to remove him from the second princess's service and possibly put him under the first princess, and solidify her succession to the throne without any doubt.The genderbend lyrics:
I don't quite understand the games the knights play, but I like how they all immediately pick up what's going on.
Seeing Polidoro slaughtering them shouldn't come as a surprise. Polidoro is a man who is accustomed to our normalcy of gender. So he's actually "OP" in this world cause he kept up with the masculinity of his old world and trained. The only thing that didn't change in this world is physics and biology. Having to deal with worn down tiny women should be relatively easy. Explains why he is so confident this whole time and why he has so much respect. I would like to see how people first reacted to him.
EDIT: Apparently, some of us are confused by the plot. Here's a quick run-down (lemme know if I miss something):
EDIT 2: Corrections in this comment
- FMC princess has yet to complete a campaign like her sisters, so Queen gives her the easy task of taking down bandits
- Caroline along with bandits are attacking towns to gather resources and flee to a neighboring country.
- FMC and co. pass by town that has been pillaged. They recruit villagers willing to fight the bandits.
Turns out the bandits are actually villagers froma different town where the nobility wereset up, killed, and taken over.- Bandits
are survivors that fledare with Caroline leading the group (one of the nobility from that town), and her loyal troop.- Caroline hopes to have revenge.
The main line of nobility/capital of the country is unaware of this situation, and think it is Caroline who has betrayed the Queen- In this chapter, MC/FMC & knights encounter the bandits and continue their assault. Knight captain yells false info to scare bandits even more. Polidoro continues the chase and assault.
- All the other content has basically been about showcasing the genderbend stuff, fanservice, and Polidoro's POV. This is your basic royal knight's story, but the author makes it fun.
The preceding chapter suggests that the queen may have known about the true nature of the mission and fully expected the second daughter to fail at this seemingly simple task, because the militarily prudent thing to do, and what was advised by the MMC, was to pull back and wait for the reinforcement. The queen knew that the nobles and peasants will nevertheless see that as a failure and further degrade the second princess's faction. Which is a good thing in the queen's eyes because her primary goal is to smooth the transition of power to her first daughter by making her the only choice to be the next queen. And by being not a threat, the second princess is not at risk of being assassinated or otherwise obstructed by the first princess. The only thing that might make the second princess a threat to the first princess is the MMC and this is the queen's way to remove him from the second princess's service and possibly put him under the first princess, and solidify her succession to the throne without any doubt.
The queen is doing this because she really loves both her daughters and do not want to see them come to any harm. Even the first princess probably loves her sister. But in the matter of succession, people make decisions not based on love but on power, and the first princess does not make all the decisions. All the nobles that threw in after the first princess will see the second princess as a threat regardless of how the first princess feels about her, because in an unlikely event the second princess becomes the queen, all her followers will be able to take action against them and the first princess will not be able to help. So they're eager to eliminate any threat even if the first princess is not. You can see how the first princess's second-in-command feels about the second princess. She wants her dead even if, or especially if, she's useless. Because as a princess, no matter how weak she is, she will never stop being a symbol.
Royal succession is often a zero-sum game. If you lose, you die. Unless you were really no threat to begin with. Even that's really not a guarantee. See Richard III and the mystery of the disappearance of his nephews, the 2 princes of the tower.