In the autumn of 1914, with the dream of a swift German victory shattered on the banks of the Marne, Kaiser Wilhelm II turned to a new commander to salvage the war: General Erich von Falkenhayn. This episode delves into the life and controversial career of one of World War I's most pivotal figures. We explore Falkenhayn's rise to power, his stark realization that the war could not be won by traditional means, and the development of his chilling new strategy: attrition. At the heart of his plan was the Battle of Verdun, a horrific engagement designed not to capture territory, but to "bleed the French army white". Was Falkenhayn a cold-blooded butcher or a grim realist who understood the brutal nature of industrial warfare better than anyone else? From the slaughter on the Meuse to his brilliant, forgotten campaign in Romania, we examine the complicated legacy of the man who gambled on blood.