When I watched "Cleopatra" very early, I didn't remember the appearance of Yu Po, but I remembered Caesar's line "Turtle Formation!" The DVD player, just for fun, went to Haidian City to sell a lot of old Hollywood movies, and they were genuine (because there is an effect close to the public domain, the copyrights of old works are easy to obtain). Among them is the old memory "Cleopatra". But in the DVD, "turtle formation" is translated as "war turtle".
But I still like to use the Mandarin word "turtle formation!" The turtle formation is between heavy infantry and light armor. The infantry around him have a spear in the middle of the heavy shield, and the infantry in the middle holds the heavy shield. Without spears, the entire reloaded formation was rectangular, and the advance speed was not fast. The infantry weapons of Dolemite, the tyrannical king of Greece, could not penetrate the entire formation, but the heavy artillery had no sights in that era and could not hit targets with such a small cross-sectional area. . Once it broke into the enemy camp, Ptolemy's army was completely unable to defeat the Roman legion. (Ptolemy's generals were silly that the siege guns were so close to Caesar's garrison that, if far, there was both time and a very small chance of hitting the target, even if the odds were slim.) - Actually It can also be associated: if Ptolemy had known that Caesar had a "turtle formation", he would have used the rolling mines at that time (there were no booby-trapped mines at that time?) Wouldn't he have obtained it!
There is a contentious tension between heavy armor and quick reflexes. In the late period of the Second Iraq War, the US military had a headache for the terrorists' IEDs, and later developed a beast version of the V-chassis explosion-proof vehicle, and the Hummer was useless. However, what heavy armor has been missing in history is a good engine. Tiger One failed, Tiger King failed, and Abrams was a gastrooper again, and the logistics often couldn't keep up.
What exactly is our 99A? Wouldn't it be that the average overhaul interval is also very short?
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