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In the dark, confined waters of the Atlantic, German U-boat captains learned that shallow water was no longer safe. This video explores the Squid anti-submarine mortar, a British weapon that looked crude, sounded unsophisticated, and yet fundamentally changed the underwater war. Unlike traditional depth charges that rolled blindly into the sea, Squid was designed to think ahead of the submarine—calculating depth, speed, and position before striking with lethal precision. We break down why Squid terrified U-boat crews: how its forward-throwing pattern trapped submarines with no room to dive, no room to maneuver, and no warning. You’ll see how British escort ships used Squid to turn sonar contact into near-instant destruction, and why survival rates for submarines caught in shallow water collapsed almost overnight. This is not a mythologized super-weapon. It’s a brutally practical solution to a deadly problem—built quickly, deployed relentlessly, and refined through hard lessons of convoy warfare. From its mechanical simplicity to its devastating tactical impact, Squid represents how the Battle of the Atlantic was ultimately won: not with elegance, but with efficiency. If you want to understand how Allied escorts finally gained the upper hand beneath the waves, this is the weapon that forced U-boats to fear the sea itself.