Worlds of Design: What's in a Name?

Character names and where we might get them from are today’s topics. This is important insofar as we don't want to delay the start of the actual adventure because someone is trying to think of a name!

Character names and where we might get them from are today’s topics. This is important insofar as we don't want to delay the start of the actual adventure because someone is trying to think of a name!

Presentation1.jpg

Picture courtesy of Pixabay.

A book often referred to among the founding works of American science fiction is named after the principle character: Ralph 124C 41+ (by Hugo Gernsback). Wikipedia says there's a reason (outside of the novel) for the name, but most of us would probably agree that the name is awful. Most of us have also heard of parents giving a child such an awful name that we think, "they shouldn't be parents if they're willing to inflict that upon another person!" Sometimes even simple names take on extra meaning from living people: “Michael Jordan” for example, or “Cam Newton,” often from sports celebrities, or presidents, or kings and queens.

Why does a player in an RPG choose a particular name for their character? It can be an anagram, pun, or homage like the original characters created for early editions of Dungeons & Dragons. Or it may be a snap decision, because to many players, the name isn't important.

Some people agonize over names. A way to make character generation as quick and painless as possible is to provide tables of appropriate-sounding names. I’ve written my own random name generators and you can too, with some research into their origins. Many of these names have accompanying backstories, so I’ll give examples of how I used them in my games.

The Easy Names

There’s obviously the list of ordinary names, which you can get from any baby name list like “Eleanor” (which is at least a medieval-sounding name) or “Fred.” If you don’t have a name off the top of your head, you can create a nickname and flesh the character out later. As an example, I’ve created “The Man with no Name” (who wore a poncho - sometimes referred to as Clint), “Muscles” (later Eradan - 18 strength), and “Wiz the Elf” (later given a more appropriate name). They can also be rhymes, like “Smiter the Fighter” or “Billbash the Rash.” Billbash was the same character who, at second level, horse-charged an old D&D balrog … and survived.

Myths & Legends

Legends are a common source of names, some more popular than others. We’ve likely heard of “Galahad” (a paladin, of course, drawn from Arthurian legend) but there’s plenty of names to be mined from the Matter of Britain, the Matter of France, and the Matter of Rome. The Matter of Britain is the body of Medieval literature and legendary material associated with Great Britain and Brittany, and the legendary kings and heroes associated with it, particularly King Arthur. The Matter of France includes names like “Rinaldo” or “Rinaldo,” “Charlemagne” from the Carolingian Cycle and the chanson de geste (song of heroic deeds). The Matter of Rome which includes material derived from or inspired by classical mythology features “Alexander the Great,” and “Julius Caesar.” (And includes the Matter of Troy, such as The Iliad and The Aeneid). Given that the names have been often translated into English, there’s also the many variants to consider: “Arthur” is likely derived from “Artorius,” but there are many other root words it has in common like “Artri” and “Artgur.”

There are plenty of names from mythology and religion; some are now so common to be popular usage (“Thor”) while others are less well-known, like “Freya” and “Azrael” (the Angel of Death). Fiction is a common source; the less popular the fiction the more likely the name will not be recognized. Tolkien’s corpus is most commonly cited, like “Glorfindel” (a Tolkien hero) and “Elendil” (a Ranger), but there’s also “Donblas”, a god from Moorcock’s works, and the entirety of Dante’s Divine Comedy to choose from.

Other Inspiration

A little more obscure but no less interesting are asterisms and other astronomical words. You could name a character after a constellation, like “Ophiuchus” or “Orion” (Wiz the Elf’s later name), or after a star like “Sirius.” You can also use place names and geography, like “Bognor Regis,” from an English town, and “Barclodiad y Gawres.” It turns out the latter is a burial chamber on the southern coast of Anglesey in Wales; I didn't know it meant "a giantess' apronful" until writing this article!

Speaking of word roots, you can translate a word representing your character into another language using Google Translate. I used “Yilderim,” the Turkish word for “lightning,” for my 18 Dexterity dwarf.

When in Doubt…

Finally, you can just ask the Internet for help. Check out Fantasy name generators. Names for all your fantasy characters. for links to many names. Or simpler, Fantasy Name Generator and donjon; Fantasy Name Generator

When choosing a PC's name, it’s important to consider what you want to accomplish. You may not take the character very seriously because you suspect they’ll be dead soon, or don’t plan to play for very long, in which case a simple name is probably all you need. Or you may want a name that tells a backstory and work hard to fit it into the game’s lore.

Where problems arise is when the player’s choice doesn’t fit with the group’s overall; there’s always the one guy who doesn’t put much thought into a name that seems out of place--I'm thinking of YOU, "Fred”!

My questions to readers: Have you ever refused a PC's name because it clashes with your setting?
 

log in or register to remove this ad

Lewis Pulsipher

Lewis Pulsipher

Dragon, White Dwarf, Fiend Folio

log in or register to remove this ad


Ace

Adventurer
SNIP Good Stuff by Lew Pulsipher

My questions to readers: Have you ever refused a PC's name because it clashes with your setting?


Many times. A serious game needs serious names and nothing drags down a game like say It in Call of Cthulhu (before any movies mind you) than Dr. Cañyon Fodder." and sure it was a mediocre set of roles from an uninspired player, it wasn't fair to those of us who were wanting a serious game.

Now in "I can't decide" situations random tables are my standby . They can have weird results though. I once rolled random first letter for Runequest and got a Q and a O. :confused:
 

Lylandra

Adventurer
Oh my names...

One of my first serious characters in an RPG was a woman named Mirai, which is japanese for "future" as she was the last female member of her people and the game was loosely based on the FF series. Also played a character called Amao Rufuran Tesla, accountant by day, elemental monk by night. This was while I had my physics courses in school and well before a certain Elon Musk popularized the name.

My very first D&D character was a bard by the name of Sensiba, inspired by the island of Zanzibar. Nickname quickly became "sensible" or "Sense/Sensy" after she joined the Sensate faction.

after that came:

  • Laurethiel, a gold elf wizard (Gool ol' Tolkien elf naming scheme)
  • one noble girl called Eleanor (nickname El, inspired by an aunt of mine named Ellinor) and the paladin Sir Sirius ("Sir Serious") - perfect examples from the OP
  • Rosalin, cleric of Chauntea, with a perfectly normal, down-to-earth name
  • Kala Maeva Vel'Erim, my first take on an asmodean cleric (inspired by the artist Maevah)
  • a Cormyrean wizard by the name of Mearyll (nickname "Raven" for her raven familiar Kay)
  • Kiraley of the Order of the Scarlet Rose, a fighter, usually called Kira
  • Ashelia, my second take on an asmodean divine character (this time an oracle). Certain people were allowed to call her Ash or Ashe(s)
  • Auryn, shamelessly inspired by the Neverending Story's "Keeper of Secrets" medallion

From my husband's character names, there's one I found especially perfectly fitting... a 4e warlord with the very roman name Augustus. Like the historical figure, this character had a wholly differnt birthname: Pierre Augustin de Colline-Blance, once a carefree noble from the county of Colline-Blanche of the Blossomwind Vale. When he was forced to fight a war and found himself betrayed and manipulated by his own family, he cast off his family name and switched to Augustus, the most cunning and deadly military leader the Vale had ever known. After he destroyed what was left of his enemies, he left his home to live as a hermit, so he was very much not "august" when our adventuring group found him.
 


pnewman

Adventurer
I strongly discourage characters whose names match those of other players. It is just too much for me when Bob's character is named Thorin but Jeff's character is named Bob.

When someone says "Bob" are they talking to Thorin's player or to Jeff's character?
 

Richards

Legend
On a related note, another thing I highly encourage when starting off a new campaign is that the PCs' names all start with a different letter of the alphabet. That makes it easier on me when tracking initiative and such, when I can use a single letter for shorthand and know exactly who it refers to. This isn't an absolute rule, just something I ask my players to keep in mind.

Of course, my most recent campaign has two PCs names Xandro and Zander, so that doesn't always work out as I had intended....

Johnathan
 

Lanefan

Victoria Rules
Of course, my most recent campaign has two PCs names Xandro and Zander, so that doesn't always work out as I had intended....
Yeah - commentators' nightmares. :)

I once played in a game where three of the characters were named Cieran (a Human), Khurin (my Dwarf), and Curunir (an Elf).

It was quicker and easier to just point at the character piece and say "that guy". :)
 



Related Articles

Remove ads

Remove ads

Top