The Blight is encountered by both sides in Leipzig, forcing the French and Coalition armies to put aside their differences and cooperate in escaping the city. A dozen or so soldiers, along with myself, barricaded ourselves inside St. Thomas Church, waiting for help that never came. We knew we couldn’t hold out for long, so we decided to evacuate on our own. On the way to the barricade, we ran into those vampires everywhere. After burning the barricade, we blew up the iron gate. At the nearby mausoleum in the cemetery, we encountered other surviving soldiers who had been waiting for rescue. They decided to join us so we could escape this place together. Our plan was to prepare barricades and somehow signal someone for help. One Russian rang the bell too early — a signal meant to call for rescue. Along with the ringing, the beasts awoke. They were everywhere, surrounding us from every side, yet we kept resisting. After several minutes, a French soldier arrived to help and blasted the gate open, but was killed instantly in the explosion. In a desperate retreat through burning buildings, we crossed the bridge to the other side of the river. However, due to a miscalculation, several soldiers who stayed at the rear met their untimely demise. After Leipzig, the War of the Sixth Coalition ended in a ceasefire, following the official recognition of the threat posed by the Blight.
Me and some friendly Russian, Austrian, French, Swedish, Germany And Poland was waking up in the Midnight. We then make our way through the Town, we then encounter some local that were stuck and needed help to get out of the bar. When we destroy the barricade the local were so kind that they give us a gentle neck massage, unfortunately for them my fellow friend kill them all then we arrived at the barricaded street there was a fire to burn the barricade while we push the cart containing gunpowder the local was so worry that we will exhausted that they helping us push it. We then arrive at a cemetery gate that we need to blew up. Upon doing that an idiot rush over to the building to ring the bell that called the local, some of them even bringing us a barrel of apples that unfortunately can blow up. Eventually some random person named Jacob show up and blow the other cemetery gate that we walk through, unfortunately for us the local became frenzy because of that and started chasing us. We managed to arrive at the end of the other bridge before it getting blew up. 4/5 star because the sapper didn't bring shovel with them.
The St. Thomas Church (German: Thomaskirche) is a Lutheran church in Leipzig, Germany. It is associated with several well-known composers such as Richard Wagner and Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, and especially Johann Sebastian Bach, who worked here as a Kapellmeister (music director) from 1723 until his death in 1750. Today, the church also holds his remains. Martin Luther preached here in 1539.
Although rebuilt over the centuries and damaged by Allied incendiary bombs in 1943, the church today mainly retains the character of a late-Gothic hall church. The Thomanerchor, the choir of the Thomaskirche, likely founded in 1212, retains a well-known boys' choir.
The churches measures 76 meters in length, of which the nave accounts for 50 meters. The nave is 25 meters wide and its walls reach a maximum height of 18 meters. The church's roof is unusually steep with a roof pitch of 63 degrees. It rises to a crown that is 45 meters high. The tower is 68 meters in height.