Names
D&D Gnome Name Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A D&D gnome name generator that produces complete, three-part names — given name, childhood nickname, and clan surname — in one click. Gnomish naming conventions are deceptively specific: the given names are short and punchy, the nicknames lean whimsical or biographical, and the clan surnames balloon into something almost bureaucratic. Getting all three parts consistent by hand mid-session is a real time sink. This tool handles that instantly, whether you're rolling up a new character or stocking a gnome settlement with a dozen plausible NPCs. Use the gender filter to target male, female, or mixed results, and adjust the count to pull exactly the list size you need.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Set the count input to however many gnome names you need, from a single character name to a full NPC roster.
- Choose a gender from the dropdown — select Male, Female, or Any if you want a mixed list.
- Click Generate to produce a list of complete three-part gnome names with given name, nickname, and clan name.
- Scan the results and click Generate again for a fresh batch if none immediately fit your character concept.
- Copy your chosen name directly into your character sheet, campaign notes, or manuscript.
Use Cases
- •Rolling up a rock gnome artificer in D&D 5e and need a full three-part name before session zero
- •Stocking a gnomish clockwork market with 10+ distinct NPC names during Dungeon Master prep
- •Building a forest gnome druid for a nature-themed Pathfinder 2e campaign
- •Writing a fantasy novel chapter set in a gnome enclave and need names that feel lore-consistent
- •Generating svirfneblin deep gnome names for an Underdark arc without breaking session pacing
Tips
- →Generate a batch of 10 or more when building a gnome community — variety across the list reveals natural-feeling clan groupings.
- →The nickname is your best roleplay hook; ask yourself what childhood event could have earned that specific name for your character.
- →For a deep gnome (svirfneblin), pick names with harder consonants from your results — they tend to sound harsher and fit Underdark tone better.
- →If the clan name feels too long for casual table use, the nickname alone works as a satisfying shorthand that other characters can call your gnome.
- →Combine two generated clan names by taking the first half of one and the second half of another to create a unique surname for a gnome from an isolated or fictional lineage.
- →Save a generation run of 20 names in a notes app before your session — having a pre-built list means zero hesitation when players wander somewhere unexpected.
FAQ
how do d&d gnome names work — given name, nickname, and clan name explained
Gnomes use a three-part structure: a short given name, a nickname earned from family or peers that usually references a personality trait or childhood moment, and a long clan surname. The clan name is the formal identifier and can stretch across several syllables. This generator outputs all three parts together so you get a complete, ready-to-use name.
can I use these gnome names for pathfinder or other fantasy systems
Yes. Pathfinder gnomes share the same whimsical naming conventions as their D&D counterparts, so the names drop in without modification for both Pathfinder 1e and 2e. They also work well for homebrew systems or fantasy fiction where you want names that feel rooted in established gnomish tradition.
what's the difference between male and female gnome names in d&d
The Player's Handbook provides separate name lists by gender for given names, but clan surnames are gender-neutral across all gnomes. The generator's gender filter applies to the given name only, matching how the lore handles it. Selecting 'Any' pulls from both pools, which is useful when generating a mixed group of NPCs.