Creative
Fictional Brand Identity Generator
A fictional brand identity generator produces a complete fake company package — name, slogan, stated product or service, and the dark secret hiding underneath the glossy exterior — so your story's corporate villain feels disturbingly plausible rather than generically evil. Thrillers, dystopian sagas, and satirical scripts all depend on institutional specificity: a vague conglomerate named MegaCorp tells readers nothing, but a pharmaceutical company with a wellness-forward brand voice and a buried clinical trial scandal tells them everything about the world your characters inhabit. Industry selection shapes every element of the output, so Healthcare brands land differently than Agriculture, Defense, or Technology ones. The gap between what a company publicly claims and what it privately does is historically one of fiction's richest seams, and the generator builds that gap in for you — public identity and concealed motive arrive together, ready to be deployed across prose, screenwriting, tabletop RPGs, or satirical essays.
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select an industry from the dropdown that fits your story's setting or thematic focus.
- Click the generate button to produce a complete brand package: name, slogan, product, and dark secret.
- Copy the output and paste it directly into your story bible, campaign notes, or script development doc.
- Regenerate multiple times within the same industry to compare options and pick the most fitting combination.
- Run the generator across different industries to build an interconnected ecosystem of fictional corporations for richer worldbuilding.
Use Cases
- •Building a tech-sector antagonist for a near-future surveillance thriller
- •Adding a pharmaceutical company with a dark clinical history to a medical drama
- •Creating a megacorporation faction for a Cyberpunk or Shadowrun RPG campaign
- •Populating a dystopian novel's economy with multiple competing corrupt brands
- •Writing a satirical piece that parodies real industry PR language and ethics gaps
- •Developing a fictional sponsor or advertiser for a podcast-style narrative fiction project
- •Giving a screenwriter a credible fake food company for a corporate whistleblower script
- •Generating background brand names to dress a short story's setting without breaking immersion
Tips
- →The most effective corporate names combine a soft, trustworthy word with a vague suffix — Veridian, Axiom, Lumency — so regenerate if the name sounds too overtly threatening.
- →Pair a generated Healthcare brand with a Technology brand and write them as secretly connected — cross-sector conspiracies feel more systemic and harder for characters to expose.
- →Use the slogan as dialogue: a character who quotes the brand's own marketing back at them in accusation is a sharp satirical move that requires no additional setup.
- →If the dark secret feels too extreme for your tone, dial it back one degree — complicity and negligence usually read more chillingly than outright malice in literary fiction.
- →Save every output you generate even if you don't use it immediately — a brand built for one story can become background texture in another set in the same fictional world.
- →For RPG use, give the corporation a three-letter stock ticker abbreviation to make it feel like lived-in economic reality during in-game newscasts or terminal readouts.
FAQ
How do I make a fictional corporation feel believable in a story?
Layer the public brand against the private reality. Give the company coherent marketing language, a plausible revenue model, and employees who genuinely believe in the mission. The dark secret should feel like a systemic inevitability rather than a villain's choice — real institutional harm tends to emerge from incentives and silence, not mustache-twirling.
Can I use a generated fictional brand name in a published novel or screenplay?
Yes — fictional corporations are a standard element of published fiction. Before publishing, do a quick trademark search to confirm the generated name isn't identical to a registered brand in the same industry. Minor variations or clearly fantastical names carry the least risk. Consult an IP attorney if the work is commercial and the similarity is close.
What industry should I pick if I want the most sinister corporate villain?
Defense, pharmaceutical, and private security industries tend to generate the most dramatically loaded combinations because their public-interest framing clashes most sharply with profit motive. Technology and agriculture work well for surveillance and environmental horror respectively. Pick the industry that mirrors the thematic stakes of your story.
How do I use the dark secret without it feeling like an info-dump?
Treat it as backstory, not dialogue. Let the secret surface through documents, rumors, and consequences rather than exposition. A character who finds a suppressed report, notices an anomaly in the supply chain, or meets a former employee is more effective than a villain monologue. The generator gives you the secret; pacing is yours to control.
What makes a fictional brand slogan feel authentic rather than obviously fake?
Real corporate slogans are vague, aspirational, and emotionally warm while saying almost nothing concrete. Phrases like 'building tomorrow, together' or 'where wellness meets possibility' sound genuine precisely because they are meaningless. If a generated slogan seems too on-the-nose, that can itself be a satirical choice — or regenerate for something more blandly sinister.
Can I generate multiple brands to build a full corporate ecosystem in one story world?
Absolutely — run the generator across several industries to populate your setting with competing institutions. A world with a compromised tech company, a predatory healthcare provider, and a politically connected energy firm feels systemic rather than one-villain-focused. That density of institutional rot is the backbone of the best dystopian and satirical worldbuilding.
How do I adapt a generated brand for a tabletop RPG session?
Use the name and slogan as public-facing canon that players can encounter in advertising and signage. Keep the dark secret as GM-only information to be discovered through investigation, hacking, or NPC contact. The product description doubles as an economic presence in the game world — facilities, supply routes, and employees the party can interact with.
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