Ignoring the comments from the two, Braydon Neal took his position on the city wall, surveying the expansive battlefield spanning a 50-mile radius.
Indigenous martial artists continued to flood the immense battleground.
The natives demonstrated a strategic approach, orchestrating their attacks in waves of tens of thousands.
While lacking coordination, this tactic allowed each martial artist to unleash their maximum combat strength.
Behind the scenes, the controller of the aborigine army displayed skill in military deployment.
What was even more fatal was that the 16th ancient city stood isolated without reinforcements.
Every aborigine invasion transformed into a fight to the death for the city's inhabitants, defending with their backs against the wall—a scenario reminiscent of Braydon's early days leading the Northern Army, a lone force without reinforcements.
They could only defend to the death!