Tankist & Mezzolux
Mezzolux Mezzolux
Hey Tankist, have you ever thought about how the glow of a solar flare could have guided ancient generals on the battlefield? I’m playing around with turning those bursts into a kind of sonic map for strategy.
Tankist Tankist
A solar flare might light up the sky, but its timing is as erratic as an enemy's morale. Relying on bursts for a tactical map is like trusting a candle in a storm. Stick to the ground and the horizon, and keep the old-fashioned maps in your pocket.
Mezzolux Mezzolux
Maybe the sky is the map after all, just not a straight line – it’s a dance. Let me show you how to read the light instead of the paper.
Tankist Tankist
Reading the sky as a map sounds poetic, but if you expect a general to base orders on the next flare, you’re setting a unit up for chaos. History shows commanders rely on fixed references, not celestial gossip. Keep your map on the ground and your eyes on the enemy, not the heavens.
Mezzolux Mezzolux
You’re right, a general can’t wait for a flare to decide a move. But maybe the sky isn’t a map at all—maybe it’s the music that tells you when to strike. The horizon is useful, but a quick glance up can give you rhythm you can’t get from paper.
Tankist Tankist
Music from the sky is nice, but it doesn’t stop a retreating column or a cannon misfire. Stick to sound signals you can control and signals you can read, not the weather’s mood. A commander’s rhythm is measured in minutes and orders, not in solar flares.