Ah - a Vision is an elemental catalyst of sorts, given to humans who have earned the favor of the gods.
[That is to say, the gods or Neuvillette himself, but even acknowledging that not all Visions come from the Seven is dangerous when he's still juggling Furina's secrets. Incomplete information will have to do.]
They appear as a crystal in a metal setting - typically round, though those found in the nation of Liyue are square - colored in the element they resonate with. They allow the human they are granted to to manipulate the element in question.
As for pnuemousia, it is a particular energy reaction found exclusively within Fontaine, for reasons unknown. The two poles of 'pneuma' and 'ousia' annihilate each other when they interact, producing a great deal of energy, which in turn is used to power any number of mechanical creations.
[He can break it down further if need be, but that should be enough context to get by on as to why many people would assume those things to be worthy of being called 'magic.']
The gods of Teyvat, to the best of my knowledge, cannot reproduce at all, at least not in the way that humans would understand it. They can create beings that serve as their familiars, but 'parenthood' is beyond them. So the idea of any god having children is equally strange to me.
no subject
[That is to say, the gods or Neuvillette himself, but even acknowledging that not all Visions come from the Seven is dangerous when he's still juggling Furina's secrets. Incomplete information will have to do.]
They appear as a crystal in a metal setting - typically round, though those found in the nation of Liyue are square - colored in the element they resonate with. They allow the human they are granted to to manipulate the element in question.
As for pnuemousia, it is a particular energy reaction found exclusively within Fontaine, for reasons unknown. The two poles of 'pneuma' and 'ousia' annihilate each other when they interact, producing a great deal of energy, which in turn is used to power any number of mechanical creations.
[He can break it down further if need be, but that should be enough context to get by on as to why many people would assume those things to be worthy of being called 'magic.']
The gods of Teyvat, to the best of my knowledge, cannot reproduce at all, at least not in the way that humans would understand it. They can create beings that serve as their familiars, but 'parenthood' is beyond them. So the idea of any god having children is equally strange to me.