Skip to main content
Back to Fun generators

Fun

RPG Character Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

An RPG character generator that spits out a full character concept in seconds — race, class, core stats, personality trait, and a backstory hook — saves real time whether you're a dungeon master scrambling for NPCs or a player who hates blank character sheets. The genre selector covers Fantasy, Sci-Fi, Horror, and Western, so the output actually fits your setting instead of feeling transplanted from a different game. Each genre draws from a distinct vocabulary: Sci-Fi surfaces pilots and hackers, Horror produces occultists and traumatized survivors, Western leans into outlaws and frontier preachers. Use the result as raw material — keep the backstory hook, rename the character, rebuild the stats in your rulebook. The generator gives you a foundation, not a finished product.

Loading usage…

Free forever — no account required

How to use

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

Detailed instructions

  1. Select your campaign genre from the Genre dropdown — Fantasy, Sci-Fi, Horror, or Western.
  2. Click Generate to produce a complete character with race, class, stats, trait, and backstory hook.
  3. Read the backstory hook first — it tells you the most useful thing about who this character is.
  4. Copy the full output or note the specific fields you want to use in your game or document.
  5. Generate again to produce alternatives and compare before committing to one character.

Use Cases

  • Building a roster of named Fantasy NPCs before a D&D 5e session so you're ready when players go off-script
  • Spinning up a Sci-Fi crew manifest for a Mothership or Stars Without Number one-shot in under a minute
  • Generating a Western outlaw or frontier preacher with a backstory hook for a Deadlands campaign
  • Unsticking fiction writing when you need a protagonist fast and the blank page isn't helping
  • Creating a Horror survivor with a built-in trauma motivation for a Call of Cthulhu or Dread one-shot

Tips

  • Generate in the correct genre before your session — a Fantasy generate mixed into a Sci-Fi campaign requires more reskinning work than just switching the selector first.
  • When building NPCs, ignore the stats entirely and focus on the name, class archetype, and hook — those three fields run a scene.
  • If the class and race feel mismatched to you, that tension is often a character concept: ask why a halfling ended up as a warlord.
  • For Horror one-shots, generate three to five characters and let each player choose from the list — shared generation creates buy-in without long sessions.
  • Use the backstory hook as a session-ending cliffhanger: introduce an NPC whose hook is directly tied to a player character's past.
  • Cross-genre experiments work well for homebrew — generate a Western character and drop them into a Fantasy setting for an instantly distinctive PC.

FAQ

how do I use this for D&D 5e character creation

The classes and stat spread map closely enough to 5e conventions to use as a starting point. Treat the stats as a rough priority guide for your official point-buy, and take the class and personality trait straight to your sheet. You'll still need to apply 5e-specific features, proficiencies, and spell lists yourself.

what does the backstory hook actually give me

It's a single narrative seed — a loss, a secret, a goal, or a grudge that tells you why this character is in the room. Dungeon masters can pull it directly into a quest hook; players can use it to roleplay motivation without writing a full backstory document. It's intentionally short so you can expand it or leave it as a mysterious detail.

can I use generated RPG characters in published fiction or a commercial game

Yes. The output is a creative prompt, not a copyrighted work — once you build on it, it's your creative property. Treat it the same way you'd treat a concept from any brainstorming session. Rename, reshape, and publish freely.