Compare the Terms
Book passages that reference archons, divine rule, region-level gods, and religious memory across Teyvat.
Liyue and Teyvat source passages around Sal Terrae, salt-god memory, old worship, and coastal historical traces.
The Complete Teyvat Library
Compare Archon and Sal Terrae across 3 shared Genshin Impact source books, with excerpts and region signals.
Book passages that reference archons, divine rule, region-level gods, and religious memory across Teyvat.
Liyue and Teyvat source passages around Sal Terrae, salt-god memory, old worship, and coastal historical traces.
Each card shows why the same book mentions both terms.
Archon: ...t it is the temple that provided safe refuge for civilians during the Archon War several millennia ago. I've heard that the God of Salt built such a place. Liyue folklore holds that she was...
Sal Terrae: Volume 1: Sal Terrae My shoes are completely waterlogged after trekking here from the banks of Dihua Marsh. The last time I took them off to pour the water out, a frog jumped out. From the...
Archon: ...ing Wind Kingdom of Mondstadt. Others say it dates back to before the Archon War, when the Salt God roamed free in Liyue. She once stood shoulder to shoulder with the many gods of Liyue, but...
Sal Terrae: ...ondstadt. Others say it dates back to before the Archon War, when the Salt God roamed free in Liyue. She once stood shoulder to shoulder with the many gods of Liyue, but her extraordinarily...
Archon: ...tood next to him. "This is salt formed from the residue of an ancient archon's tears—" The voice caught him off guard, breaking the long silence like a stone disrupts the surface of a pool...
Sal Terrae: ...me see... what's this — it looks like salt? It's about time I went to Sal Terrae to pay my respects again. If it's okay with you, this is all I need in return for the gem." The fox-eyed...
This page only uses books that mention both terms, then ranks them by source-text mentions, reading depth, and region coverage.
Start with the shared source books, compare the two excerpts on each card, then open the individual glossary pages when you need more context.
No. It is an unofficial navigation layer that points to source-book passages and glossary pages so readers can inspect the original context.