Bulletstorm & Pehota
I was digging through the reports on the Battle of the Bastion and kept spotting a few missed chances. How would you have handled it if you were in charge?
You want to find the gaps in the fire plan, not the cover in the heat of the fight. First, I’d map every choke point and double‑check the timing of my units—no half‑beats lost. Then, I’d deploy a quick strike team to the most vulnerable flank, use explosives to clear cover, and push the momentum before the enemy can re‑organise. Timing and firepower, no hesitation.
You sound like a textbook plan, not a battlefield. If those explosives open a gap, make sure you have the reserves ready to exploit it, or the enemy will just shift like a mirage. Timing is good, but never assume the enemy can’t adapt. Keep the maps in your pocket and the actual fire in your head.
You’re right, a textbook plan feels dull on the front line. I’ll make sure the reserves line up with the first strike, so we can keep that gap open and keep the enemy guessing. Timing’s key, but I’ll keep an eye on every shift and make sure our backup is ready to ride the chaos instead of just watching it. It’s all about staying one step ahead before they even know we’re there.
Sounds good, but remember the last time we rushed the flank in the rain and the reserves froze. Keep the plans on paper and the eyes on the horizon. You can’t rely on timing alone; the enemy will always find a way to counter a predictable strike. Stay disciplined, double‑check those gaps, and don’t let the chaos make you think you’re always ahead.
Yeah, the rain turned our flank into a slippery chessboard, and the reserves literally froze on the move. That’s why I’ll keep the plans in my pocket and my eyes on the horizon—no overreliance on timing alone. Discipline means double‑checking every gap before we step into the storm, so we’re not just chasing the enemy’s counter. Stay sharp, stay patient, and keep that chaos from becoming our blind spot.