Compared with Charlemagne's covert operations, Albion's complacency, and the performance of Alfheim before the war, which was stable and tense.
Li Lin was very clear that the "Yellow Plan" was derived from the "Schlieffen Plan" of the German Empire's army before World War I, and the core idea of both was to break through the enemy's defenses with powerful corps quickly, cut off the enemy's lines of communication, then encircle and surround the enemy's main force group, aiming to annihilate the main enemy force in a frontal battle. On this point, the governors of Alfheim and the Chief of the General Staff of the German Empire's army were in perfect accord. Constrained by national power and objective geographical conditions, they both pinned their hopes on the mobility of large troop movements.
However, as a person from later times, Li Lin also clearly understood where the mistakes of Count Alfheim lay.