The Fugue Plane is where the souls of mortals are initially drawn when they die. The vast majority of this plane is flat, gray, bland and nondescript, with no notable topographical features. The plane's only significant feature is the City of Judgment in the middle of which stands the Crystal Spire where Kelemvor and Jergal reside.
Surrounding the City of Judgement is the Wall of the Faithless, where all unclaimed, faithless souls are mortared into the wall.
City of Judgement[]
The only real landmark of the Fugue Plane.
Basilisca[]
Newly arrived False and Faithless souls are brought to the Basilica for judgment and sentencing. For the False, the punishment varies, but for the Faithless, there is only one sentence - entombment within the Wall.
Baatezu are permitted within the halls of the Basilica, extending bargains with the doomed souls awaiting sentencing. Souls who are likely to be judged Faithless often find it preferable to join the ranks of the devils as an enslaved minion rather than face oblivion on the Wall.
The Throne of Judgment in the Basilica is almost always empty. Only in the most severe cases does Kelemvor himself appear to personally sentence a doomed soul.
Eternity's End[]
During his original tenure as the god of the dead, Jergal created Eternity's End with the explicit purpose of storing the names of every creature who has ever died in various vaults. While most of the vaults simply contain tomes with endless lists of names of people long-dead, a few have been adapted to store magical lore and artifacts deemed too dangerous to be loose in the planes.
The Codex of the Doomed, the giant tome in which all the names of the False and Faithless are inscribed, is stored in the Temple of Kelemvor in Eternity's End.