Genshin Impact Books

The Complete Teyvat Library

King Deshret and Witch Source Comparison

Compare King Deshret and Witch across 2 shared Genshin Impact source books, with excerpts and region signals.

2 Shared Books
14 Source Signals
1 Regions

Compare the Terms

Sumeru desert references to King Deshret, Al-Ahmar, old kingdoms, desert memory, and related scholarship.

Witch, fortune-teller, magic, and undying-fire references across Mondstadt stories, Fontaine fiction, Sumeru tales, and broader fairy-tale routes.

Regions Where They Meet

  1. Sumeru 2 shared books · 14 source signals

Compare Source Evidence

Each card shows why the same book mentions both terms.

Sumeru 8 min

The Shepherd and the Magic Bottle

King Deshret: Legend has it that King Al-Ahmar, while still alive, had collected numerous Jinn and demons from across the world, placing them within magic bottles. Legend has it that the world was once...

Witch: ...d numerous Jinn and demons from across the world, placing them within magic bottles. Legend has it that the world was once teeming with such Jinn. Al-Ahmar, mighty yet bewildered, seized...

Open full source page 7 + 3 source signals
Sumeru 13 min

The Tale of Shiruyeh and Shirin

King Deshret: ...scattered mortals ensconced themselves in vassal states until my lord Al-Ahmar and the Sage-King of the Greenwood gathered their subjects. Once the oasis paradise was reconstructed, the age...

Witch: ...t Shirin was later subdued by my lord Al-Ahmar, who detained her in a magic silver bottle. Others say that she still roams the desert, tormenting overconfident adventurers and tirelessly...

Open full source page 3 + 1 source signals

Shared Source Books

These books mention both terms and are ranked by source-text signals and reading depth.

Comparison FAQ

How are King Deshret and Witch compared here?

This page only uses books that mention both terms, then ranks them by source-text mentions, reading depth, and region coverage.

Where should I start with King Deshret and Witch?

Start with the shared source books, compare the two excerpts on each card, then open the individual glossary pages when you need more context.

Is this an official lore interpretation?

No. It is an unofficial navigation layer that points to source-book passages and glossary pages so readers can inspect the original context.