I crept up to the waterfall with a single Training Manual in my pack and a save file that smelled like possibility. My second character sat at the starting screen while the obelisk blinked in the distance. Five minutes later the scarcity had flipped into a steady stream.
I’m going to show you the exact steps I used — no mods, no exploits that touch servers, just a save-and-bank trick that turns one manual into many. You’ll move between characters, trade through the Guild Merchant, and leave with stacks of upgrade materials while other players grind for hours.
I found Haydn Seek at the mouth of the Meridion waterfall on my first pass. How to get unlimited Training Manuals in Farever
What you need: the ability to create a secondary character, access to an obelisk for fast travel, and a bit of patience. If you own Farever on Steam it currently lists for $29.99 (€28); the farming method itself costs 0 USD (€0).
Step-by-step:
- Create a second character and load into the starting area. Mounts help — they shave minutes off each run.
- Ride or run to Meridion and unlock the first obelisk so you can fast travel back afterward.
- Head to the waterfall on the northeast map marker and speak to Haydn Seek; he gives you one Training Manual.
- Don’t use the manual. Fast-travel back to the obelisk, open the Guild Merchant, and select Bank. Move every item, including the Training Manual, into the Bank.
- Quit to your main character, load your save, visit the Guild Merchant, and withdraw the Training Manuals from the Bank into your inventory.
- Use the manuals on your primary character’s weapons. Repeat the loop with fresh secondary characters as often as you like.

How do I farm Training Manuals in Farever?
The short answer is: by alternating saves and using the Bank as a transfer vault. You create a supply loop that never consumes your save file. The mechanic is native to the game’s save and Guild Merchant systems, so you’re using intended interfaces rather than external tools.

I watched the Bank and Merchant menus tick over during a livestream. Why this method keeps working
The game hands out a single manual per fresh interaction; by resetting with a new character you reset that interaction. The loop runs like a printing press, churning out identical copies without touching servers.
On a practical level you’re exploiting persistence between characters and the Bank UI. No third-party programs, no modified files — just the same interfaces you use to manage loot. That’s why the method is low-risk for your account but high-reward for your inventory.
Is this method bannable or considered cheating?
I checked community threads on Reddit and Discord and spoke to players who have used the same flow. Developers rarely ban for single-player save tricks that don’t affect multiplayer leaders or economy servers. If Farever runs cloud-synced saves through official services like Steam, treat any future patches as a risk and back up saves if you want to be cautious.
I watched a clan raid breeze through content after standardizing weapons. What to upgrade first and why it matters
Every class has a narrow weapons pool; upgrading the meta options speeds up every fight. Pick the handful of weapons that players in Farever’s Discord and subreddit recommend and feed them your manuals first.
Think of your bank as a coin purse of manuals — compact and ready when you need to pay for skill upgrades. Prioritize weapons that scale with your class’ main stat and save rare manuals for endgame gear.
If you want to share this on community hubs, post a short clip to Steam Community, Discord, or Reddit showing the bank transfer and the NPC interaction. That visual proof will let skeptical players replicate the loop without second-guessing.
So are you going to hoard manuals for every build, trade the trick with your guild, or sit back and watch others farm while you steamroll the map?