Names
Ocean Name Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
An ocean name generator produces evocative names for the fictional seas and oceans that shape a fantasy world's map. Bodies of water carry mood and history — the Sundered Sea, the Whispering Deep, the Sea of Tears — and a vivid name makes a coastline feel storied and dangerous. This generator combines atmospheric adjectives with watery nouns and optional proper names, so your oceans sound like places sailors fear and legends are set. Use it for fantasy fiction, tabletop campaigns, video games, and worldbuilding, whether naming the great ocean a quest must cross or a small sea between rival nations. Generate a batch and choose names that suit each water's character, from a serene sapphire expanse to a drowned, storm-wracked deep.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Choose how many ocean names you want.
- Click Generate to produce evocative sea names.
- Pick names that suit each water's character.
- Place them on your world map among the landmasses.
Use Cases
- •Oceans and seas in fantasy worldbuilding
- •Maps and settings for tabletop campaigns
- •Video-game and fiction worlds
- •Naming bodies of water for a story map
- •Seafaring and pirate-themed settings
- •Atmospheric place names for fiction
Tips
- →Let the name imply the water's mood or history.
- →Vary tone — a calm expanse reads differently from a feared deep.
- →Name the smaller seas and straits too, for a complete map.
- →Say the name aloud; sea names should sound grand and evocative.
FAQ
what makes a good ocean name
A strong ocean name carries mood and implied history — an evocative adjective paired with a watery noun, like the Sundered Sea or the Whispering Deep. The best names suggest something about the water's character or past, making a coastline feel storied rather than a blank blue space on the map.
should ocean names imply history
It adds depth — a name like the Sea of Tears or the Drowned Reach hints at a tragedy or legend, giving the water a story before you write a word about it. Even a subtle implied meaning makes a body of water feel like a real place with a past.
how do ocean names fit a world map
Naming the seas, gulfs, and straits around your landmasses makes a map feel complete and lived-in, just as real ones do. Varying the tone — a serene named expanse versus a feared, storm-wracked deep — adds character and can hint at the dangers of crossing each.