Conan Exiles Interactive Maps

The Conan Exiles Map on this page brings both worlds together into one complete view. Since it works as a full Conan Exiles Interactive Map, it covers Exiled Lands and Isle of Siptah side by side as one connected experience. Even though they’re separate maps in-game, progression, knowledge hunting, boss tracking, and exploration all benefit from seeing them treated as a single package.
Exiled Lands focuses on classic survival routes with dungeons, factions, lorestones, and obelisks shaping long-term progression. Isle of Siptah leans harder into dense combat, vaults, leyshrines, and high-risk loot zones. This all-in-one setup makes it easier to understand how each map complements the other. You can plan boss runs, lore cleanup, and knowledge routes without mentally splitting your progress between two worlds. Everything that matters is laid out clearly, just across different environments.
How to Use the Conan Exiles Maps
- Boss categories include Boss and Three-Skull Boss encounters across both maps
- Factions and Camps cover Darfari Cannibals, Black Hand, Dogs of the Desert, Heirs of the North, Lemurians, Relic Hunters, Frost Giants, Forgotten Tribe, Giant Kings, Exiles, Black Corsairs, Stygian Raiders, and Accursed
- Files include Journals, Notes, Lore, Language, Dictionary entries, Emotes, Banners, and Knowledge
- Interactive Characters highlight NPCs and Merchants
- Locations include Caves, Unnamed Caves, Ruins, Vistas, Elder Vaults, Leyshrines, Dungeons, Obelisks, Lorestones, Buildings, Capitals, and other landmarks
- Pick-Ups show Loot Chests, Weapons, Armor, Figurines, Fragments of Power, Relic Fragments, Quest Requirements, and Sealed Waterskins
What the Map Can Do
Understanding Two Worlds as One
Treating Exiled Lands and Isle of Siptah as a single combined map changes how progression feels. Exiled Lands is more spread out, with long travel lines between Ruins, Dungeons, and Obelisks. Bosses and factions feel tied to geography and climate, which helps you pace difficulty. Isle of Siptah, by contrast, is tighter and more intense. Elder Vaults, Leyshrines, and Three-Skull Bosses sit closer together, pushing faster combat loops and higher risk rewards.
Seeing both maps together helps you recognize that they serve different purposes. Exiled Lands supports exploration, lore gathering, and structured faction encounters. Isle of Siptah rewards aggressive farming, vault clearing, and boss-focused progression. When you understand that split, it becomes easier to decide where to spend your time depending on what you need next.
Boss Hunting, Loot Routes, and Power Scaling
Boss placement across both maps tells a clear story about difficulty curves. Standard Boss markers in Exiled Lands often guard dungeons, ruins, or lore-heavy locations. They act as checkpoints for gear readiness and survival skill. Three-Skull Bosses on Isle of Siptah are more numerous and more dangerous, often sitting near Elder Vaults or high-value loot areas.
Loot Chests, Weapons, and Armor pickups fill in the gaps between these encounters. In Exiled Lands, loot tends to reward exploration and dungeon completion. On Siptah, loot density is higher, encouraging repeated loops through dangerous zones. Figurines, Fragments of Power, and Relic Fragments tie directly into long-term character growth, and seeing their locations across both maps helps you plan efficient farming routes instead of grinding blindly.

Lore, Knowledge, and Late-Game Cleanup
Lore progression is another place where the all-in-one view really helps. Journals, Notes, Lore entries, Languages, and Dictionary files spread unevenly across the two maps. Exiled Lands holds the bulk of traditional Conan lore through Lorestones, ruins, and faction areas. Isle of Siptah adds its own flavor through vaults, leyshrines, and scattered knowledge points.
Knowledge and Banner locations help flesh out crafting and progression options, while NPCs and Merchants anchor both worlds with practical utility. Vistas, Capitals, and unique buildings act as visual landmarks that make navigation more intuitive over time.
When you reach late-game cleanup, this combined approach saves a ton of time. Instead of wondering which map you’re missing content on, you can focus on specific categories. Maybe you’re missing a few Knowledge nodes in Exiled Lands, or a couple of Elder Vaults on Siptah. Having both worlds treated as one makes full completion feel achievable instead of overwhelming.
Map Table
Here’s a quick look at how content is split across both maps.
| Category | Example | Map |
|---|---|---|
| Boss | Dungeon Guardian | Exiled Lands |
| Three-Skull Boss | High-Tier World Boss | Isle of Siptah |
| Elder Vault | Vault Entrance | Isle of Siptah |
| Obelisk | World Landmark | Exiled Lands |
| Lorestone | Ancient Inscription | Exiled Lands |
FAQs
Does this include both Conan Exiles maps
Yes, Exiled Lands and Isle of Siptah are fully included as one combined Conan Exiles Map.
Are all bosses shown across both worlds
Every Boss and Three-Skull Boss appears, covering dungeons, vaults, and open-world encounters.
Where can I focus for faster power progression
Isle of Siptah leans toward dense combat, vaults, and high-value loot, while Exiled Lands supports steady exploration and lore growth.
Are lore and knowledge locations included
All Journals, Notes, Lorestones, Knowledge points, and related files appear across both maps.
Is this the full Conan Exiles Interactive Map
It is. All categories from both worlds are covered in one all-in-one guide.
Credit: Conan Exiles Maps by Wand






