Ba

This chapter throws a massive curveball by introducing a structured cosmology that seems to borrow from various Buddhist and Daoist traditions. The concept of multiple "Buddha-worlds" (佛土/佛国) is a core tenet of Mahayana Buddhism, particularly in the *Avatamsaka Sutra* (Huayan Jing), which describes a cosmos of infinite, interpenetrating realms. The specific list given—East (Fragrant), South (Joyful), West (Utmost Bliss), North (Lotus), and Center (Adamantine)—is a direct nod to this, with the "Utmost Bliss World" (极乐世界) being the famous Pure Land of Amitabha Buddha.

This chapter throws a massive curveball by introducing a structured cosmology that seems to borrow from various Buddhist and Daoist traditions. The concept of multiple "Buddha-worlds" (佛土/佛国) is a core tenet of Mahayana Buddhism, particularly in the *Avatamsaka Sutra* (Huayan Jing), which describes a cosmos of infinite, interpenetrating realms. The specific list given—East (Fragrant), South (Joyful), West (Utmost Bliss), North (Lotus), and Center (Adamantine)—is a direct nod to this, with the "Utmost Bliss World" (极乐世界) being the famous Pure Land of Amitabha Buddha.

Story context

Get ready, fellow Daoists! This chapter is a massive lore drop that will completely reframe how you see the Dao-Twisted World. Li Huowang receives a crash course in cosmic geography from the gloriously vulgar Abbess Jingxin, introducing the concept of the Five Buddhist Realms and the terrifying hierarchy of gods that exist within them. While the protagonist’s mind is being blown by the true scale of the universe’s horror, the quieter B-plot shows us a refreshing moment of normalcy: Chun Xiaoman’s dedication to her sword training reveals a character hungry for agency, while Yang Xiaohai and Gouwa provide a look at the group’s internal dynamics. It’s a chapter of big reveals and small, character-driven moments, perfectly balancing cosmic dread with grounded survival.

Why it matters

This chapter is a "lore dump" done right—it's delivered through a character whose personality is so strong (the filthy, snoring, utterly pragmatic Abbess Jingxin) that it never feels like a textbook. Watch how Li Huowang reacts. He's not just filing information; he's trying to *connect* it. His mind immediately goes to Ba She and the Zhengde Temple incident, proving he’s learning to see the patterns in the madness.

Quick facts

Source novel
Dao Gui Yi Xian
First appearance
The Five Buddhist Realms
Chapter references
1
Type hints
dao gui yi xian, li huowang, abbess jingxin
Guide tags
lore heavy, worldbuilding, cosmic horror

Appears in chapters

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Source novel

Dao Gui Yi Xian