Strelok & Gamora
Ever wonder how you keep your squad on point when the battlefield is a moving target?
I keep the squad tight by cutting out distractions, issuing clear, precise orders, and if anyone drifts, I cut them off with a quick, “Stop, focus.” The battlefield moves, but the plan stays rigid.
Nice, but if your squad ever starts improvising, you might need to rewire them.
If they start improvising, I either rewire them or cut them out—no room for half‑measures.
Cut them out? Sure, if you’re ready for a morale drop that’ll be louder than a mortar blast.
If morale drops, we learn from it—though I'd rather cut the weak link and keep the team tight.
You’re good at cutting the weak link, but remember a chain only holds if every link is ready to take the load. Make sure you’re training them to carry it, not just letting them fall.
Training is part of cutting. I sharpen them until they can carry the load; if they can’t, I cut them before the chain breaks.
Sharp as a knife, but remember even the best cut must be measured – otherwise you’ll end up slicing the entire squad. Keep your targets precise and your cuts clean.
Got it. Precision first, then cut. No one gets sliced by mistake.
Got it—precision, then removal. No accidental casualties.Sounds good—just make sure the cut is always the last resort, not the first move.
Sure thing—cut only when all else fails, but if someone is a liability, I don’t hesitate. That’s how we keep the squad strong.
Sounds solid—just remember the last cut should always be the safest choice for the rest of the squad. If it’s a “no‑hassle” decision, then at least the rest of you don’t have to double‑check the math.