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Generator hub
Pick a D&D name generator by race, class, or campaign role. Built for players who need a character name before the session starts.
Start here if you want a quick list without sorting through every category.
Use this hub when you want a set of related tools, then open the generator that best matches your project.
Pick a featured generator when you only need a few names and do not want to compare every option.
Use the sections when your brief calls for a specific race, class, animal, place, or handle style.
Choose from common tabletop races when ancestry matters most to the character.
Use these when the character concept starts with a job, order, or combat style.
These fit cult leaders, cursed nobles, rival adventurers, and monsters with names.
Name the places and threats around the party, from dungeons to dragons.
These articles cover naming rules, examples, and longer name lists.
Guide
Class-specific naming tips for fighters, wizards, rogues, clerics, bards, and more, with 120+ D&D character name ideas.
Read guideGuide
A reference guide to D&D naming conventions for elves, dwarves, halflings, orcs, dragonborn, tieflings, and gnomes, with 100+ examples.
Read guideGuide
Analysis of 10,000+ D&D character names, broken down by race and class, showing the names players choose and the patterns behind them.
Read guideGuide
Browse 330+ dark elf names for D&D and fantasy, including drow, female, male, house, evil, and character-name ideas.
Read guideIf this hub is close but not exact, try one of these nearby collections.
fantasy name generators
Find a fantasy name generator for a character, creature, villain, or place. Start broad, then jump into a specific tool when the setting starts to take shape.
character name generators
Use these character name generators when you know you need a person, but the genre is still open. Pick a style first, then narrow the name from there.
place name generators
Use these place name generators for maps, towns, landmarks, schools, and natural locations. Pick the place type first so the name matches its job in the setting.
Choose by race if culture and ancestry matter most. Choose by class if the role at the table is the stronger part of the character.
Yes. They also work for Pathfinder, homebrew RPGs, fantasy games, and fiction drafts.