My point is that your decision to attack is one that takes 3-5 turns with no meaningful possible positional maneuvering. So a game may have 200 turns but many fewer "decisions". There's not much "area control" like in many other strategic boardgames. It's more bluffing about your original setup choices. Every battle is reduced to a bet of whether your unit is higher or not and if it is, well you don't have a lot of agency on that. Especially if attacking.