The course of the battle was truly lackluster.
The reinforcements of Governor Iben, newly arrived and unsteady, stood no chance against the charge led by Losa's finest heavy cavalry, numbering over three thousand elite riders, serving as the spearhead.
They lacked the courage for a desperate fight, burning bridges behind them; the reinforcements, not even halfway across the river, began to retreat en masse.
Among the reinforcements on the shore, most of the soldiers conscripted from various villages lost their courage and desperately attempted to flee back across, while a few elites, under the command of their respective lords, barely managed to form a formation.
But not every army has the capability to face the Crusader heavy cavalry charge head-on.
With just one round of charge, the enemy fell like cut wheat. Blood stained the Nile River red, and the bodies were swept away by the waves, flowing into the sea.
