MachineGun & Nolan
Do you ever find yourself dissecting how terrain steered the outcome of battles, like at Thermopylae or Gettysburg?
Absolutely. Terrain is the first variable you assess before any plan. A narrow pass at Thermopylae turns an army into a line, a wide field at Gettysburg lets artillery dictate movement. I go straight to the map, quantify choke points, line of sight, cover and mobility. Once I have the numbers, the rest falls into place.
Sounds like you’re a battlefield cartographer at heart. I’d say keep those numbers, but don’t forget the people who have to move through them—sometimes morale can bend a map’s edges. Keep digging, and the story will follow.
Good point—numbers give the skeleton, but the crew makes the body. Keep an eye on morale, and the map will bend to what they can actually handle.
Exactly, and it’s the little human touches—like a commander’s word or a soldier’s grit—that turn a map into a living story. Keep tracking those morale spikes, and you’ll see the battlefield shift before the next order is even issued.