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Original video: • SABATON - The Attack of the Dead Men (Offi... Please head over to Sabaton's channel and show them your love and support! Throughout history, there are these epic stories of last stands —stories that show up everywhere. You’ve got the 300 at Thermopylae, the Alamo here in the U.S., Saragarhi, and plenty of others: Rorke’s Drift, Masada, and even legendary “holdouts” like Pavlov’s House during Stalingrad. But when it comes to last stands, it’s genuinely hard to top what we’re doing today: “Attack of the Dead Men.” Yep—we’re going back to Sabaton this week, and this might be one of the most horrifyingly unforgettable “last stand” stories I’ve ever come across. Not because of some grand strategic victory… but because if you’ve ever wondered what a last stand would look like if it accidentally borrowed the vibe of a zombie apocalypse, this is basically it. What this is about (context for the reaction) We’re in World War I, at a Russian fortress in what’s now northeastern Poland (the famous story centers on Osowiec Fortress). The Germans launch an attack and use chlorine-based gas—and the assumption is that the defenders are either dead or completely incapacitated. And honestly, by all rights? They should be. Chlorine gas reacts with moisture in the respiratory tract and can cause catastrophic injury—burning tissue, fluid in the lungs, choking, coughing blood. It’s an absolutely miserable way to go. Even if you survive the initial exposure, you’re still in a nightmare. So the Germans advance—thousands pushing forward against what they think is a shattered garrison. And then… the defenders counterattack. Not “healthy troops with bayonets,” but men who are visibly dying—faces wrapped in cloth because there aren’t enough masks, coughing and bleeding, staggering forward anyway. From the German perspective, it would have looked like the dead just stood up and came back for round two. That’s the whole “dead men” image. That’s the shock. Reaction notes (what stood out) The video leans hard into the gas imagery, and that’s exactly right for this story. The “again and again” repetition is perfect—because psychologically, that’s how it would feel: “No, these guys should be down. Why are they still coming?” It captures the real “weapon” of the moment: not just rifles and trenches, but morale—the sheer terror and confusion of being charged by defenders who look like they shouldn’t be alive. Quick note on chemical weapons This is also a brutal reminder of how WWI pushed chemical warfare into widespread battlefield use. Beyond the obvious moral horror, gas is: indiscriminate (it hits whoever is in the area) fickle (wind shifts can send it back into your own lines) and rarely “clean” in effect (it’s suffering, not a quick end) Wrap-up + viewer prompt Really well done by Sabaton—the imagery and motif match the story, and the tone fits: fear, shock, and that grim determination. If you want me to cover more “last stand” stories in the Sabaton/war-history lane, toss me suggestions: Rorke’s Drift, Masada, Saragarhi, etc. There are a ton of these through history, and they’re always revealing—not just for tactics, but for the human side of endurance. (And yes—I’m cutting myself off here before I turn an 8–10 minute reaction into a full documentary.)