User blog comment:IamJakuhoRaikoben/Chapter 475: Dimaria Chronos Yesta, Review./@comment-5303512-20160302135223/@comment-7418318-20160302213427

"I am not comparing demons and humans together"
 * So you weren't? Then that means you mentioned completely irrelevant information fully knowing it was totally irrelevant, just for the sake of contradicting us. Okay, got it.

"I am saying that the rarity is not as valuable as it was when Chelia was introduced." Again, rarity is just a side-consideration. It's about how and where they can do the most good and by healing people they can do a lot more good than by fighting. "what I mean by healing intuitive variations is the way of healing, such as magic, tools, medicine, etc."
 * In 475 chapters we have not seen a single magic tool or super medicine. There would have been plenty of situations in which such tools and medicines would have been used for sure, but they weren't thus we can pretty savely conclude they either don't exist or are so rare that they certainly can't replace actual healers altogether and thus once again Wendy and Chelia would greatly improve the over-all efficiency of their attached troops if the kept healing them instead of charging into battle.

"Anyone who is critically injured should not go on the battlefield after being healed"
 * What? Why? That makes absolutely no sense. And didn't you yourself previously argue that they are outnumbered so badly they need every single warm body they can get? Why WHY in the world would you send your healers into battle due to the desperate situation and keep fully healed soldiers sitting on the side lines just because they were critically injured prior to being healed?

To the last point: Especially in medieval times the battlefield was chaos. The point where lines for line marched at each other was more the american independence and succession wars.

With todays armies using almost exclusively ranged weaponry, there is far more front line and save place than there was in the medieval times where armies clashed face to face in close combat.

Sure I've never been on a battlefield myself, but I've seen more documentions about war than I've seen war movies in my life (unless you cound fantasy and sci-fi settings), so I'm certainly not basing my arguments off of hollywood productions. Don't treat other people like they know only war movies without even knowing your facts yourself.

Not to mention that on today's battlefields medics are officially non-combatants and thus not shot at (most of the time), so they can afford to stay on the battlefield to provide first aid right where the soldier has fallen. But there are no rules of engagement or Genf Convention equivalents in Fairy Tail, as Dimaria clearly demonstrated.

Isn't it funny how some days ago you citiziced me for bringing real-world examples into a Fairy Tail discussion and now when it suits your line of argument it's suddenly okay to do so?