Battle of Hadera

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The Battle of Hadera, also known as the Great Scouring, was a conflict in Israel over possession of the fallen city of Hadera. The War was fought by a massed army from Israel organised in advance, against a raiding force consisting of troops from Egypt and Palestine.

Theatre

Tensions were first raised when the Mayor of Hadera, E1993, had been inactive for more than a month, resulting in a massive operation by the Government of Israel to contact him to get online and prevent the city from falling due to inactivity. Officials unearthed accounts from Instagram to Pinterest, but even these yielded no response. As the predetermined date of the fall loomed, the Government realised they had to prepare to defend the City as soon as it fell, in order to protect the many historic monuments within it, as well as vast caches of resources hoarded there by the famously wealthy E1993; it was said more than 3,000 gold was stored within the city bank.

On the morning of the fall, almost all Israeli citizens were online, waiting for their chance to defend. Supply depots and barricades had been constructed in the mountains of Gader overlooking the main valley of Hadera, providing both proximity and relative safety. An administrator manually triggered the fall, at the behest of Israeli officials so that there was no chance of the city falling whilst they were offline, and Israelis swarmed the city to get any valuables there to safety, and to defend from the inevitable onslaught of raiders.

The first attackers arrived mere minutes after the city fell, with an Eygptian force led by louisdek being deployed from Osiris. As the Israelis scoured the city for valuables, others stayed in the streets to defend against the attacking force, which was soon joined by other players, including Confens. Eventually, the attacking forces were repelled, but not before irreparable damage had been done to the city. Soon the city had been claimed by Gader, and Israel set to work repairing the historic monument. The 3,000 gold was never discovered, but a hoard of tools, resources, and map art was. The battle remains one of the most costly in Israeli history, resulting in many deaths and multiple sets of god gear lost.