Compare the Terms
Dragon references across legends, ancient records, serpent stories, and sovereign-adjacent texts.
Natlan source passages around the Volcano Lord, volcanic imagery, Kuntur, Qoyllor, Tequil, tribal stories, and heroic trials.
The Complete Teyvat Library
Compare Dragon and Volcano Lord across 3 shared Genshin Impact source books, with excerpts and region signals.
Dragon references across legends, ancient records, serpent stories, and sovereign-adjacent texts.
Natlan source passages around the Volcano Lord, volcanic imagery, Kuntur, Qoyllor, Tequil, tribal stories, and heroic trials.
Each card shows why the same book mentions both terms.
Dragon: ...e dark Volcano Lord. The Great Volcano was once the dwelling of great dragons, and on this matter little further need be said. But when they fled amidst the flames, their dwelling was seized...
Volcano Lord: Volume 1 This is one part of the story of the Volcano Lord's struggle against the people of the tribes. If we were to start from the beginning, the storyteller might have to spend seventeen...
Dragon: ...s, it begins in the age when the stars and the moon held the sky, the dragons ruled the land, and Lord of the Night ruled the night realm. The people then were ignorant, and wandered the...
Volcano Lord: ...d a winged dragon. That dragon was the scion of the great lord of the volcano, Xiuhcoatl. In some versions of the story, it is said he was none other than Xiuhcoatl himself, but the gods...
Dragon: ...ottled green — that my ancestors called Kahotea. And like the ancient dragons, soar effortlessly to the mountains where chants abound... The lost envoys of the heavens built there a city of...
Volcano Lord: ...drils, conclude my final journey. I once climbed the lonely, desolate volcano, I have seen countless hot springs with my own eyes, And I shall head to the other side of the dark currents, To...
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.