2-2 Yellow Wind Ridge Map
- 黄风岭 - Yellow Wind Ridge
- 三叉大道诸葛轻烟 - Trident Road Zhuge Qingyan
- 蛇儿岭 - Snake Ridge
- 第二指挥部 - Second Command Post
- 九龙殿 - Nine Dragon Hall
- 沙门关遗址 - Ruins of Shamen Pass
- 沙门村 - Shamen Village
- 沙门矿洞 - Shamen Mine Cave
- 沙门洞窟 - Shamen Cave
- 黄风岭山口 - Yellow Wind Ridge Mountain Pass
- 断桥 - Broken Bridge
- 石南洞窟 - Stone South Cave
- 六角楼 - Hexagonal Pavilion
- 灵果寺 - Lingguo Temple
- 白骨洞 - White Bone Cave
- 不齐坊 - Buqi Workshop
- 九鼎书院 - Nine Cauldrons Academy
- 府君观 - Fuguan Temple
- 灵圣宫 - Sacred Spirit Palace
- 雕像广场 - Statue Plaza
Yellow Wind Ridge is the perilous place where Tang Sanzang and his disciples encounter danger in the 20th chapter of "Journey to the West." The main location here is the Yellow Wind Cave, the lair of the Yellow Wind Guai. The original text describes Yellow Wind Ridge as having steep cliffs and unusual winds frequently blowing through the mountains.
Flowing Sands Kingdom
In the original "Journey to the West," the Flowing Sands Kingdom is mentioned only briefly, specifically in the chapter involving the New Thunderclap Temple. When Sun Wukong goes to request assistance from the three armies of deities, the Grandmaster of the Great Sage sends his disciple, Little Prince Zhang, who introduces himself as the prince of Flowing Sands Kingdom. Some interpretations link the Flowing Sands River, where Sha Wujing (Sandy) resides, with the Flowing Sands Kingdom, but these connections are purely based on name similarity without substantial evidence.
Regarding the plot in "Black Myth: Wukong," where the Flowing Sands Kingdom expels Buddhists and worships rats as deities, there is a similar storyline in the original text: The Immortal of Tiger Power, the Immortal of Elk Power, and the Immortal of Antelope Power are three Yaoguai who disguise themselves as Taoist magicians to deceive the ruler of the Kingdom of Chechi. They expel Buddhists and force the populace to follow Taoism.