Alentejo, after two days of consecutive attacks, the exhausted defenders, who were on their last breath, yet refused to fall.
As the aggressors, the Bimon Army Corps was not having an easy time either. Not being able to defeat the defenders immediately meant the war had turned into a war of attrition.
The castle was small and could not accommodate a large army, so it could not lean on the advantage of fortified defense. But in the end, it played a crucial role.
The Bimon Cavalry's usual tactic of swift assaults ran into a wall here. No matter how fierce the cavalry was, they were powerless in front of the castle walls.
Unable to break through the Central Army, the formation with the castle as its core, remained steadfast.
Even if the Bimon Cavalry attacked from every direction, scattered the defense, but their enemy still had hundreds of thousands, they couldn't kill them all right away.