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Why Germany’s “Bouncing Betty” Mine Made Allied Soldiers Freeze in Open Fields On June 6, 1944, American troops landing at Utah Beach faced a weapon they couldn’t see, couldn’t hear, and couldn’t fight back against. Buried just beneath the sand was a German mine designed not to kill one soldier, but entire squads. The S-Mine - known to Allied troops as the “Bouncing Betty”. This video explains why the German S-Mine became one of the most feared infantry weapons of World War II. Unlike traditional landmines, it didn’t explode at your feet. It jumped out of the ground, rose to waist height, and detonated mid-air, spraying hundreds of steel fragments horizontally across open ground. Using historical records, battlefield reports, and postwar analysis, this documentary breaks down: • How the S-Mine worked and why its design was so lethal • Why waist-height detonation made it far deadlier than standard mines • How Germany used mass minefields to compensate for limited manpower • Why soldiers froze when they heard the mine’s distinctive launch sound • How the weapon reshaped infantry tactics and mine warfare permanently The psychological effect was as devastating as the physical one. Soldiers could not see the enemy. There was no warning. Just empty fields that might kill you with one wrong step. Veterans consistently described the S-Mine as more terrifying than machine guns or artillery. This is not a sensationalized story. It is a grounded examination of how a simple steel cylinder weighing less than nine pounds became one of the most effective morale-breaking weapons of the Second World War. If you’re interested in World War II weapons, military engineering, battlefield psychology, and how technology shapes infantry combat, this video provides the full context behind Germany’s most infamous anti-personnel mine. Historical sources, military manuals, and veteran accounts are referenced throughout