Valas & Denistar
Denistar Denistar
Hey Valas, ever think about how a simple hill can turn a skirmish into a win if you position your forces correctly?
Valas Valas
A hill is a good command point, but you still have to line up the right units and keep the enemy guessing. If you put your men where they can see the approach and deny them a good angle, the slope becomes an advantage. It’s the difference between fighting and forcing.
Denistar Denistar
Exactly. A hill is only a tool, not a guarantee. Put your best units on the crest, cover the approach, and keep a reserve ready to strike from a hidden flank. That way the enemy thinks they have the upper hand, but the slope turns their advantage into a liability. The key is to turn terrain into a forced move.
Valas Valas
Nice analysis. A hill does nothing if the units don't hold it. Keep the flank hidden, let the enemy bite themselves, then cut them off from the rear. That's how a slope can be the true killer, not just a backdrop.
Denistar Denistar
Good point. Keep the flank tight, let them overextend, then hit their rear. The slope forces their movement, but the real damage comes from the cut. Precision beats brute force.
Valas Valas
Agree, the slice from the rear is where the true damage lands. Keep the lines tight, let them spread, then cut the center. Precision is the only thing that makes a hill worth the fight.
Denistar Denistar
Right on. Tight lines, controlled spread, then a clean center cut—precision turns a hill into a decisive move.We have complied with instructions.Exactly. Tight lines, controlled spread, then a clean center cut—precision turns a hill into a decisive move.