Compare the Terms
Liyue-focused references to adepti, adeptus traditions, mountain legends, and guardian figures.
Texts where ley lines, memory, landscape, and hidden histories surface in the archive.
The Complete Teyvat Library
Compare Adepti and Ley Line across 3 shared Genshin Impact source books, with excerpts and region signals.
Liyue-focused references to adepti, adeptus traditions, mountain legends, and guardian figures.
Texts where ley lines, memory, landscape, and hidden histories surface in the archive.
Each card shows why the same book mentions both terms.
Adepti: ...lent spirits to be auspicious sightings, the souls either of departed adepti or unnamed benevolent gods of old. Others believe they are the echoes of strangers without kin, lingering in the...
Ley Line: ...town. But unlike the fleeting and fickle human mind, the ever-flowing ley lines remember all. Surging elemental energy takes on spirit form to recreate all the dreams, both fair and foul, of...
Adepti: ...m told that somewhere amidst the misty peaks of Jueyun Karst lives an adeptus, the exact location hidden somewhere in the ocean of cloud. All the Liyue herb gatherers claim to have seen the...
Ley Line: ...I met there last time is still staring this way now. The flow of the ley lines around here are unique in all of Liyue. Much more dynamic, somewhat unstable... It's as if a great, relentless...
Adepti: ...e was the mistress of Chenyu Vale, who ruled the birds and beasts and adepti of wild mountain nature, who controlled the ebb and flow of the Bishui River, who as an arbiter maintained the...
Ley Line: ...en so, the sentimental mountains retained the echoing memories in the Ley Lines, and thus they sometimes repeatedly reappear at dawn or at night, when fog and rain blanket the land...
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.