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Chapter 1688: Adapt. Destroy. Survive
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... ndeed straightforward—blunt, even—but that didn’t mean it was a bad one.
While Cain preferred more intricate maneuvers—strategies designed to break the enemy’s cohesion and sow confusion—those required flawless coordination among troops, and that level of discipline was most certainly lacking at this stage of the war. A direct assault, while lacking elegance, also meant there were fewer variables that could go disastrously wrong.
Still, Cain had something else in mind.
A ...
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