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Main article: Books (Dungeon Siege)


Fedwyrr Way, Volume One is a book in Dungeon Siege.

Location[]

Found during the Glacern Book Return Quest.

Content[]

In the fifth century, before the coming of the Imperial traders and the 10th Legion, the first record of the wonders that would one day be known collectively as Fedwyrr's Way was penned by the famed Agallan cartographers, Fedwyrr and Klars. They described the network of natural caverns as 'a cramped, stinking, and altogether foul series of holes' and noted it in their journals as the only means by which the Green Range could be traversed.

Winding through miles of mineral-searing rock where Frostspire Mountain collides with the Green Range, Fedwyrr's Way varies from open air fissures barely wide enough for a man to slide through to caverns 'vast enough for a litter of dragon whelps to spread their wings.'

Marking their way along with luminous stones chipped from rocky outcroppings, the explorers left behind a legacy that would later guide Imperial traders and the 10th Legion into the interior of Ehb. To this day, the mineral-rich Glitterdelve, slippery Alpine Caverns, and phosphor-littered Subterranean River are still the primary path by which travelers pass between Mount Frostspire and the Green Range.

Exploratory shafts dug in the 8th century revealed the presence of iron, driving Imperial traders to push harder for Droog concessions in the region. Later, the discovery of gold and coal fueled the expansion of the early Kingdom, while regular mine shafts began to shore up the sometimes unpredictable interior of Mount Frostspire.


Appearances[]

Square enix black
This book was taken from Dungeon Siege Series of video games or from websites created and owned by Square Enix, the copyright of which is held by Square Enix. All trademarks and registered trademarks present in the image are proprietary to Square Enix, the inclusion of which implies no affiliation with Dungeon Siege Wiki. The use of such images is believed to fall under the fair use doctrine of copyright law.
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