U4GM Diablo 4 How to Farm Forgotten Souls Fast
If you have been running Nightmare content for a while, you already know the feeling. One bad stretch of upgrades and suddenly Forgotten Souls are gone. That is why a lot of players have started leaning into a tighter dungeon route that keeps the salvage count high and the crafting tab from drying up. It is not really about chasing one giant loot drop. It is about keeping the whole loop moving, and, honestly, it helps if you are also picking up useful D4 items while you are in there and not wasting time on random junk.
The two nodes people keep talking about
The first thing most players grab is Nemesis. It is a nasty little upgrade, in a good way. Hit a shrine inside a dungeon and it can spit out a pack of Elites right on top of you. That sounds messy, and it is, but the upside is obvious: more Elites, more drops, more chances at salvage mats. The second node is Branching Pathways. Once that is active, Escalation runs can push out extra Horadric Portals, which means more reward rooms and less time staring at empty hallways. If you ask around in town, you will hear the same thing over and over. People like this setup because it feels direct. Kill more, open more, leave with more.
What the run actually feels like
The loop itself is pretty simple. You chain high-tier Nightmare Dungeons with Escalation Sigils from the Occultist, then keep moving until the sigil is done. The run can get ugly fast. The Butcher shows up. So does Amalgam of Rage Gestation. Sometimes both. That is part of the deal. In return, the loot gets a lot better. A normal Nightmare Dungeon can land around 905 Forgotten Souls in about 17 minutes, which works out to roughly 53 a minute. A longer Escalation Sigil run can hit about 2,456 Souls in 49 minutes. The pace dips a bit, sure, but the room for Unique drops and Mythic chances makes up for it.
Why people keep repeating the route
Once you settle into it, the gains start to stack up in a way that is hard to ignore. Dedicated farmers can sit on more than 11,000 Forgotten Souls without much drama, and the side materials pile up too. Rawhide, Iron Chunks, Veiled Crystals, Baleful Fragments, even Obducite and Neathiron, they all start filling space in your stash. That is why this route has taken off. It does not just feed one part of the economy. It feeds all of it. If you keep your screen clean, skip the clutter, and keep moving, the whole thing starts to feel less like a grind and more like a rhythm. Some players even buy cheap D4 items before they jump back in, just to save time and stay focused on the farming loop.
The two nodes people keep talking about
The first thing most players grab is Nemesis. It is a nasty little upgrade, in a good way. Hit a shrine inside a dungeon and it can spit out a pack of Elites right on top of you. That sounds messy, and it is, but the upside is obvious: more Elites, more drops, more chances at salvage mats. The second node is Branching Pathways. Once that is active, Escalation runs can push out extra Horadric Portals, which means more reward rooms and less time staring at empty hallways. If you ask around in town, you will hear the same thing over and over. People like this setup because it feels direct. Kill more, open more, leave with more.
What the run actually feels like
The loop itself is pretty simple. You chain high-tier Nightmare Dungeons with Escalation Sigils from the Occultist, then keep moving until the sigil is done. The run can get ugly fast. The Butcher shows up. So does Amalgam of Rage Gestation. Sometimes both. That is part of the deal. In return, the loot gets a lot better. A normal Nightmare Dungeon can land around 905 Forgotten Souls in about 17 minutes, which works out to roughly 53 a minute. A longer Escalation Sigil run can hit about 2,456 Souls in 49 minutes. The pace dips a bit, sure, but the room for Unique drops and Mythic chances makes up for it.
Why people keep repeating the route
Once you settle into it, the gains start to stack up in a way that is hard to ignore. Dedicated farmers can sit on more than 11,000 Forgotten Souls without much drama, and the side materials pile up too. Rawhide, Iron Chunks, Veiled Crystals, Baleful Fragments, even Obducite and Neathiron, they all start filling space in your stash. That is why this route has taken off. It does not just feed one part of the economy. It feeds all of it. If you keep your screen clean, skip the clutter, and keep moving, the whole thing starts to feel less like a grind and more like a rhythm. Some players even buy cheap D4 items before they jump back in, just to save time and stay focused on the farming loop.