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Fictional Song Title Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A fictional song title generator solves a specific worldbuilding problem: you need genre-authentic track names fast, and placeholders like 'Song 1' kill immersion. Writers, game designers, screenwriters, and tabletop RPG creators all hit this wall. A jukebox packed with plausible country titles makes a diner feel lived-in. A character's CD collection with real-sounding indie folk records tells readers who they are before a word of dialogue. This generator draws on the distinct vocabulary of seven genres — Indie Folk, 90s Grunge, Classic Rock, Pop, Country, Jazz, and Metal. Each has its own image bank: grunge reaches for raw frustration, jazz for impressionistic abstraction, metal for mythology and power. Set the genre and choose how many titles you need, up to a full tracklist in one run.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Select your target genre from the dropdown — choose the genre your fictional artist or story world belongs to.
  2. Set the count to how many titles you need, using a higher number like 12-16 to give yourself room to choose.
  3. Click Generate and scan the full list before committing — read them aloud to check how they sound.
  4. Copy the titles you want to keep and paste them into your project document, tracklist, or prop design.
  5. Run the generator again with the same settings to get a fresh batch if you need more variety or replacements.

Use Cases

  • Building a 10-track fictional discography for a character's band in a novel or screenplay
  • Populating a video game jukebox or in-world radio station with genre-specific track names
  • Creating realistic setlist props and album artwork mockups for a film or TV production
  • Stocking a tabletop RPG's in-world concert posters, zines, or music venue flyers
  • Using a generated title as a creative constraint when writing an original song from scratch

Tips

  • Generate twice the number you actually need — editing a list down to the strongest titles beats forcing weak ones to work.
  • For a band with an established sound, stick to one genre across all runs to keep the discography internally consistent.
  • Combine a generated title with a character's name for instant album-title candidates, e.g. 'Sarah Vane – [Generated Title]'.
  • If you're writing dialogue where a character mentions a song, pick a title with a distinctive word that can be referenced naturally in the sentence.
  • Classic rock and grunge outputs pair especially well with fictional band name generators — the register of language often matches.
  • For period-accurate fiction, match the generator's genre to the era: country for 1970s settings, grunge for 1990s Seattle-type stories.

FAQ

can I use fictional song titles in a published novel or game without legal issues

Yes — song titles are not protected by copyright in most jurisdictions, including the US, so you can use or adapt any title this generator produces in a published work. Only the underlying composition and lyrics carry copyright. That means a generated title in your novel's dialogue, a game's soundtrack list, or a screenplay prop is legally clear.

what makes a fictional song title sound genre-authentic

Authenticity comes from specificity and the right image bank. 'Dust and Kerosene' reads country; 'Glass Cathedral' reads indie folk or post-rock — both feel like they promise a real sound. This generator pulls from each genre's actual vocabulary conventions, so titles land in the right emotional register even without music behind them.

how many titles should I generate for a full fictional tracklist

A standard album runs 10–12 tracks, so generate eight titles two or three times to build a wide pool, then select the strongest. If a title is close but not perfect, treat it as a draft — swap one word or combine two results. Regenerating within the same genre produces significantly different output each time.