Names
Samurai Name Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A samurai name generator built on real Japanese naming conventions gives fictional warriors the weight they need to feel grounded. This tool draws from historical clan surnames and given names rooted in feudal Japan — clans like Oda, Takeda, and Shimazu; given names echoing warriors like Yukimura and Kenshin — then combines them into plausible fictional composites. Toggle the title option on to get fuller, ceremonial name-plus-honorific results for clan leaders and daimyo retainers. Turn it off for clean prose-ready names. Set count to 5 for a single protagonist shortlist, or push it higher when populating an entire dojo, retinue, or rival faction.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Set the count field to how many samurai names you need — use 5 for a quick shortlist or higher to populate a full roster.
- Choose whether to include a title using the toggle; select 'Yes' for ceremonial names with rank honorifics, or 'No' for clean prose-ready names.
- Click Generate to produce your list of samurai names based on your settings.
- Scan the results and copy any names that suit your character's archetype, clan role, or story tone.
- Run the generator again if you want a fresh batch — each result is independently randomized, so repeated clicks give new combinations.
Use Cases
- •Naming a ronin protagonist in a Sengoku-era historical fiction novel
- •Generating a full rival clan roster for a Legend of the Five Rings campaign
- •Populating NPC samurai and retainers in an RPG Maker or Unity feudal Japan game
- •Building a character sheet for Bushido tabletop with a period-appropriate honorific title
- •Naming background soldiers and faction leaders across a manga or webcomic arc
Tips
- →Generate with titles ON first to see the full ceremonial form, then note which clan names you like and search that batch with titles OFF for cleaner prose versions.
- →Samurai names with hard consonants (K, T, D) tend to read as more aggressive or martial; softer sounds (Y, M, N) suit scholar-warriors or political figures.
- →If a generated name has a clan name you already associate with a real historical figure, swap just the given name — the clan name alone grounds the character without copying.
- →For antagonists or rival clan leaders, favor two-syllable given names; they read as blunt and authoritative, which suits commanding figures in feudal fiction.
- →Pair a generated name with a self-given warrior epithet (like 'Tiger of Kai' referencing Takeda Shingen) to add depth without changing the core name structure.
- →When writing dialogue, Japanese characters would rarely use the full name — use the given name alone among allies and the clan name or title in formal or tense situations.
FAQ
how are samurai names structured in Japanese
Japanese names place the clan or family name first, followed by the personal given name — the opposite of Western convention. Samurai could also hold titles like 'no Kami' referencing provincial lordship. This generator follows that clan-first order and optionally appends a period-appropriate honorific when you enable the title toggle.
are the samurai names historically accurate or made up
The generator uses real historical clan surnames and given names from feudal Japan as source material, then combines them randomly into fictional composites. You won't get an exact match to a real figure like Miyamoto Musashi or Honda Tadakatsu, which makes results ideal for fiction — authentic in feel without misrepresenting actual historical people.
can I use these samurai names for female characters
Yes. Female samurai, known as onna-bugeisha, used the same clan-name-first structure as male warriors. Some generated given names skew masculine due to their warrior sources, but many work for any gender. Generate a batch of 10 or more and filter by the syllable feel that fits your character's archetype.