| Category | Marvels |
| Continent | Brucrumus |
| Region | Onvorn |
| Owner | none |
| Built | Dawn Era |
| Map | Lothalorn |
Built during the Dawn Era, the Hall of Hades is a place of ancient crypts. This site became the resting place for Covenant soldiers who fought in the Creation War (1486 DE - 8777 DE). As the conflict progressed, the management of this area was entrusted to a Covenant hero named Hades. He fortified the site with powerful magic, expanding and securing it with the aid of several dozen earth elementals. These ex-primordial minions opposed the Primordial goal of undoing Creation, and they assisted in the construction of the tombs and mausoleums that comprise the Hall of Hades.
The Hall of Hades is a truly monumental structure, with a uniform canal flanked by countless resting places of the departed. This expansive corridor extends for twenty miles, culminating in the southeast at a wall of swirling gray clouds, the Gloom Wall, a bridge connecting Bal-Kriav and the Gray Wastes. The canal is known as the Ghost River, leading to the Ebonmurk. Along its path, it passes through grand vaulted passages and their hundred chambers. Aptly named, the area is haunted by apparitions, spirits, restless souls, moaning entities, and phantoms.
The Gloom Wall may be one-way for the majority, but the spirits that have traversed from this domain can occasionally return from the Gray Wastes. Luckless individuals, they harbor an affinity for their former lives, rebuffing the grandeur of Hades' realm.
Hlaventad, of the Caretakers - "The Lost Souls"
The halls of Hades are guarded by a sect of Hades' devoted followers known as the Caretakers. These priests move unimpeded among the spirits and ghosts that haunt the domain. This boon is granted by Hades himself to any devout worshiper who sets foot in the area. Additionally, the Caretakers oversee the maintenance of the place, training new priests and dispatching them into the world as proselytizers.
The Halls of Hades can be utilized for a fee to store the remains of those prohibited from resurrecting or to be revived at a later date. Interring bodies within the facility is uncomplicated; however, retrieving them for resurrection is arduous. Generally, the Church of Hades opposes resurrection, yet exceptions have been granted if a substantial offering is made. Extracting truly distinguished individuals from the Hall of Hades is most challenging, with negotiations between Higher Powers being the prevailing rationale.