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To German tank commanders, open ground was supposed to be safety. Speed, maneuver, and distance were meant to protect armor from enemy fire. Then they encountered a British gun so powerful, so accurate, that open terrain became a killing zone stretching nearly two miles. This video tells the story of the British 17-pounder — a weapon many German crews considered borderline insane in its performance. Designed to defeat the heaviest German armor, the gun could penetrate Panthers and Tigers at ranges where crews believed themselves untouchable. On the flat fields of Normandy, the Low Countries, and Northwest Europe, German tank commanders learned that distance no longer guaranteed survival. Drawing on battlefield reports, German after-action accounts, and British gunnery doctrine, this episode explains how the 17-pounder reshaped armored combat. Concealed anti-tank positions, tank destroyers like the Archer, and Firefly-equipped Shermans turned open ground into a lethal trap. German crews slowed their advances, hugged cover, and altered routes — not because of air attack, but because unseen guns could reach out and kill from extreme range. This is not just the story of a weapon, but of fear imposed by physics and training. The 17-pounder forced German armor to rethink movement itself — proving that sometimes the most dangerous place on the battlefield is where you think nothing can hit you.