I actually did. And you still haven't disapproved of why my line of logic is wrong.
The fact that elemental energy is something fundamental does not mean that it is necessarily used in everything, that is not even an argument (literally several Teyvat spells do not use elemental energy, in addition to things like alchemy, Adeptus Arts, among many others);
You didn't show any evidence of any kind of energy and especially elemental energy being used in creation (which is necessary for the creation of the book's world to scale into something);
The term "magic" extends to several things (there are several spells), trying to limit Theo term "magic" as if it only meant elemental energy doesn't prove anything because of that;
There is also an equivalence where it says that "the world (Simulanka) is as real as what would be fiction in the real world (like books)" + an equivalence that "the world (Simulanka) is as real as a dream" + the fact of existing only in the book and not demonstrating that it actually exists (like a game or story that is only a "reality" if you enter the "game"/"story", but that from the outside is not a reality, like SAO for example)
First scan link:
https://genshin-impact.fandom.com/w... offense to being called a "witch" at all.[8]
The second scan literally says Mona is a mage and a part of Hexenzirkel. Mona uses magic every time she casts her hydro powers, just like every catalyst user.
This scan is no different from Mona's, it says literally nothing about magic, witches' magic or proves that "term 'magic' in general = elemental energy" (nor is there any way to prove such a thing in any way).
She uses magic that is elemental energy, nothing about her uses witch magic like creation magic or spells, she uses her vision in basically everything she does, this literally proves nothing about witch magic, she is basically a common vision user, even though she is a mage, with the difference that she mixes her knowledge with astrology + her vision to do something other than "pure elemental manipulation", but that is not even called some kind of magic, witch/wizard magic or something like that.
Any proof that it is still a fictional existence, other than it being based on a story plot? Despite the world itself was transformed and said to be no longer fiction.
Literally Simulanka's existence is said to be "as real as real world fiction (like stories/books)" and has its existence "compared to a dream", and the world only exists within the book.
I think this is proof of the enough, even more so when the world is declared "as real as fiction" and "compared to a dream" within the world/reality/book itself, which is the place where this world would be the most real it could be (and yet thus it is declared "as real as fiction" and "compared to a dream").
Okay uh, what is this supposed to infer?
The point is that everything points out that the room/Imaginarium Theater, Simulnaka and the book/Imaginarium Theatsr are all exactly the same thing (in addition to all apparently being created by the same type of magic), with the room/Imaginarium Theater being literally the unique in that it is not necessary to enter a book to get there, but still being possibly something that does not really exist, like the interior of the book/imaginarium Teatro and Simulnaka.
Reasons:
Simulnaka's existence is "as real as fiction" and "compared to a dream";
The room/imaginarium Theater is quickly theorized by the Traveler as "another world", just as Simulnaka is "another world" (which does not actually exist), besides the image in the window making it very obvious that we are no longer in Mondstadt;
All 3 are impossible to enter (if you don't enter the room/imaginarium theater, you don't enter the book/imaginarium theater), unless the person is invited or pulled;
All 3 are created by the same magic (it is said by Wolfy that witches have creation magic);
The room/Imaginarium Theater is described as "real fantasy" and "standing between reality and fiction", descriptions that are reminiscent of the Sumilnaka, with the Sumilnaka being something that doesn't really exist ("as real as fiction" "compared to a dream" and being a world that only exists within the book), but, within the world, it is something like a reality (a reality that even from within, still has its existence compared to fiction and a dream), basically being something that when it comes to "status of existence", is something that lies between reality and fantasy/fiction, a reality that does not truly exist, that even from within reality (from the point of view of this reality), this reality is as real as fiction or a dream.
Books, stories and fictional media aren't "fictional aspects" of the real world. The fictional world does not exist in the real world. It is merely something that man made-up for entertainment, comes in the form of media, but there is absolutely no way that fictional content is part of the world. Hence, why it is even called "fictional" in the first place. In summary, books are not fictional things, it is rather shapes of matter that have a story written into their pages. There are no fictional things in the real world, making that term itself rather make no sense.
As for it to be compared to a dream, I'm pretty sure the Traveller and Nilou, even Paimon would notice it, and even have dreamscape effects. It wasn't explicitly said it was a dream either. It's rather unlikely to be a dream. Not to mention it is mentioned to be a "real fantasy".
No one is even talking about "fictional aspects of the world", but rather literally the fiction that exists in the real world (books/stories), the statement itself talks about "fiction from the outside world", and not about the world itself/ " fictional aspects" of the world, clearly mentioning things like stories. No one is saying that there is a "fictional world" that is an aspect of the real world of Genshin, but rather what is literally fiction (stories/books). I have my doubts if you are able to interpret what is written there, no one is saying that there is a place in the real world of Genshin that is literally fictional, the world is being compared to what is fiction for the real world of Genshin (like stories, and even in a certain way a comparison with dreams).
I didn't say it's a literal dream, in fact, I know very well that it isn't, since I read Samulnika's entire mission, they are inside a book, as I've said several times.
And the point of the comparison with a dream is not that it is literally a dream, but that it is "as real as one", the question itself being about how real the Samulnika is, to which it is answered as "it is as real as what is fiction in the real world" and "as real as a dream".
I'm struggling to see that you indexed any. Provide your evidence with blue links.
The scans are the texts, they look like this: