Names
Wizard Name Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A wizard name generator built for fantasy writers, tabletop players, and worldbuilders who need names that actually sound arcane. The names draw on unusual syllable patterns, archaic consonant clusters, and otherworldly endings — soft vowel flows for enigmatic scholars, harder pairings for battle mages. Generate up to a batch at a time and toggle the title option to prepend honorifics like Archmage, Grand Magus, or Stormcaller, turning a solid name into something that commands a room before the character speaks. This works equally well for a D&D wizard rolled up at midnight, an antagonist in a fantasy novel's magic council, or an NPC mentor whose name needs to stick in players' heads for a full campaign.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Set the Count field to the number of wizard names you want — start with 10 or more for better variety.
- Choose Yes in the Include Title dropdown to add arcane honorifics, or No for bare names you'll title yourself.
- Click Generate to produce your list of wizard and sorcerer names instantly.
- Scan the output list and copy any names that match your character's intended personality or power level.
- Regenerate as many times as needed, then mix syllables from different results to craft a fully custom name.
Use Cases
- •Naming a D&D wizard or warlock before tonight's session using D&D Beyond or Roll20
- •Creating an archmage antagonist for a fantasy novel with a title that signals their rank immediately
- •Generating a full roster of rival sorcerers for a homebrew magic school setting or campaign arc
- •Picking an arcane-sounding username for a fantasy community, Discord server, or gaming forum
- •Naming spell-casting NPCs and background mages in a fantasy screenplay or short story draft
Tips
- →Run two or three batches without titles first, then add titles manually — it's easier to match the right honorific once you've chosen a name.
- →Names with double consonants like 'Tharren' or 'Ezzavel' read as more sinister; single flowing syllables like 'Aelion' suit scholarly or benevolent mages.
- →If a generated name almost works but feels too long, drop the first syllable — 'Maldravus' becomes 'Dravus', which can sound sharper and more memorable.
- →Cross-reference your chosen name against major fantasy franchises (a quick Google search) to avoid accidentally naming your character after a famous existing wizard.
- →For a magic school or guild setting, generate 20 or more names in one session and group them by sound — similar phonetics suggest wizards from the same region or tradition.
- →Pair names ending in hard stops (-ak, -or, -eth) with aggressive titles like Warbringer or Stormcaller for battle mages; softer endings (-iel, -ara) fit titles like Seer or Lorekeeper better.
FAQ
what makes a wizard name sound arcane and not just made up
The best wizard names combine uncommon consonant clusters with flowing vowels and endings that feel archaic — Latin-adjacent suffixes like -ius, -ael, or -orn do a lot of work. The name should be pronounceable but unfamiliar, so it feels like it belongs to a different world rather than a random string of letters. Browsing a larger batch helps you spot which phonetic patterns match the character archetype you have in mind.
can I use these wizard names in a published novel or commercial game
Yes. All names generated here are free to use in personal and commercial projects — published fiction, indie video games, tabletop RPG supplements, or streaming content. No attribution is required. Because the names are procedurally generated, they carry no copyright.
what titles get added when I turn the title option on
With Include Title set to Yes, the generator prepends honorifics such as Archmage, Grand Magus, Seer, or Stormcaller. These signal rank and magical specialization at a glance, which is especially useful when you need a character's authority to be obvious from their very first mention in a story or on a character sheet.