"Breakthrough!"
Raffel shouted this phrase as he charged through the enemy ranks for the second time, but the soldiers on either side did not block him; instead, they actively made way.
As he was puzzled, he suddenly realized that nearly a hundred Imperial Knights charging with him into the enemy ranks, more than fifty had been left behind.
Lead shots and pellets swept through the Imperial Knights, knocking them off their horses one by one.
At this moment, the monks finally grasped the intricacy of the situation. Even though Raffel was a Great Knight, he feared being dragged into hand-to-hand combat, because that would make him susceptible to being hit with live shots from hawk cannons.
Pellet bombardment and live shot bombardment are two different concepts.
So why actively attack the Great Knights, evade the Great Knights, focus on the Imperial Knights, and once the Imperial Knights are exhausted, the Great Knight has to retreat even if he doesn't want to.
