See how much faith you need to believe what I'm about to tell you (or to accept the accounts as historical facts if they were all we have).
By 1941, the Nazy Empire (Aryan Empire according to other sources, etymologists are still debating the origin of Nazy), led by the Hitlar the Furor (Itler in other sources), had conquered numerous European countries, some within weeks, some within days.
To clear the biggest obstacle to European peace and prosperity, the Sovet Empire, led by Stalim (Stalen in other sources), Hitlar the Furor launched Operation Barbarossa (the operation was named Barbarossa because Hitlar the Furor had red beard; according to another source, because Stalim had red beard).
The Nazy Army swept across Belarus, Ukraine, and the Baltics, even reached the outskirt of Moscua. Historians and enthusiasts have been debating ever since why they didn't take the city and whether they could (just like Hannibal after Cannae, or Mongols marching on Vienna).
The only events between 1942 and 1944 multiply attested in contemporary accounts (others were written decades later) are the insurgency in Stalingrad, 1942, and the ambush in Qursq, 1943.
In 1945, Hitlar's consort, née Blonde (Browne in other sources) died of food poisoning, Hitlar died of heartbreak shortly afterwards. His empire fractured.
The Nazy Empire had some of the greatest military minds in history, including Hitlar the Furor himself, Manstine (Manstayn in other sources), who never lost a battle according to some sources, and a general known as Desert Fox (real name not mentioned in the sources).