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Paizo unveils Pathfinder 2E Feybound, a fey-heavy remaster sourcebook

Feybound looks built to do more than add lore: it gives Pathfinder 2E fauns, gremlins, nymphs, sprites, memory magic, and First World material that could reshape a campaign.

Sam Ortega··2 min read
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Paizo unveils Pathfinder 2E Feybound, a fey-heavy remaster sourcebook
Source: X (formerly Twitter

Paizo’s next Pathfinder 2E Remaster book does not look like a slim lore packet. Feybound is shaping up as a real build-space book, with new fey ancestries, a versatile heritage, memory magic, and enough First World material to change the tone of a campaign as much as the mechanics.

Paizo announced the book on June 17, 2026, and put it in the same remaster-era pipeline that already includes Impossible Magic, the class-and-spell book due July 30, 2026. Feybound is set for November 4, 2026 and will retail for $64.99, which puts it squarely in hardcover sourcebook territory rather than a niche setting release. Paizo is also splitting it into multiple editions: a standard hardcover, a Pocket Edition sized 6.7 inches by 8.4 inches, a Sketch Edition exclusive to hobby retailers and paizo.com, and a Special Edition deluxe hardcover with faux leather, metallic debossing, and a ribbon bookmark.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The sales pitch is fey-first from top to bottom. Paizo says Feybound centers on the Yestereve Revels, where “every kind of fey from lowly gremlin to towering warrior of the Wild Hunt” gathers, and it folds in creatures, items, archetypes, and other options inspired by fairy tales. The player-facing hooks are the ones that matter most here: fauns, gremlins, nymphs, and sprites as ancestries, plus the fadrim versatile heritage. Paizo also says the book will support curses, transformations, and memory magic, along with a trickster muse option for bards and even the chance to ride a unicorn.

That mix matters because it fills a different lane than a baseline remaster rulebook. Player Core-style books establish the chassis; Feybound looks designed to widen it, especially for tables that want characters who feel born from storybook logic instead of standard fantasy archetypes. If you are building a new character and want a fey angle that is more than cosmetic, this is the book that could matter on day one. If you are running a campaign in the First World, or anywhere that leans hard into fey courts, bargains, and trickery, the gazetteer of the First World and expanded material on the Eldest should be the real draw.

Paizo’s recent release cadence suggests it knows that appetite is there. The Impossible Playtest began on December 9, 2024 and ran eight weeks through January 31, 2025, and Paizo later said necromancers briefly outperformed human fighter in Demiplane character creation during the test. That is the same audience Feybound is aiming at now: players and GMs who want a fresh rules hook, not just prettier lore. Collectors will want the Special Edition. Everyone else will be watching for the ancestries and magic that make the book worth opening on November 4.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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