←◆→ KINGDOM NAME GENERATOR ←◆→

Realms forged in iron,
names carved into history.

Generate regal kingdom names for empires, realms, and forgotten lands.

Kingdom Name Generator

A great kingdom name carries power, history, and purpose. Use our generator to create unique, regal names for empires, realms, and lands that shape your world.

From ancient dynasties to dark dominions, these names are crafted to inspire legends, spark stories, and bring your worlds to life.

Perfect For
  • D&D Campaigns
  • Fantasy Novels
  • Tabletop Games
  • Game Development
  • Worldbuilding
How It Works

Click the generate button to instantly create unique kingdom names. Use filters to refine the style and theme. Click the copy icon on any name to save it to your clipboard.

Tips for Naming a Kingdom
  • Reflect the culture, history, or values of the realm.
  • Use evocative sounds and strong syllables.
  • Consider the geography and resources.
  • Mix real-world inspiration with fantasy elements.
  • Keep it memorable, timeless, and easy to pronounce.

What Makes a Good Kingdom Name?

A compelling kingdom name resonates with phonetic weight and cultural meaning. The best names balance familiarity with fantasy — they sound like places that could exist, yet carry an otherworldly gravitas. Strong consonants (V, K, R, Th) convey power and permanence, while softer sounds (L, M, S) suggest beauty, mystery, or decay.

Historical naming conventions provide a foundation: suffixes like -hold, -mere, -court, and -vale anchor a name in linguistic tradition. Prefixes drawn from Old Norse, Latin, or Gaelic roots add authenticity. The most memorable kingdom names tell a story in a single word — Mourngard evokes loss and fortification, while Aethermere suggests celestial waters.

Strong Sounds

Hard consonants (K, V, R, Z) and sharp vowels create names that feel martial, ancient, or formidable. Valdris, Korvanis, and Draven use these sounds to project authority and strength.

Kingdom Name Structure

Most great kingdom names follow a two-part structure: a root name plus a descriptor. The root establishes identity (Eldrathor), while the suffix defines character (Eternal Empire, Ironhold, Storm Crown).

D&D Kingdom Names — Examples Table

These kingdom names are ready to drop into your next D&D campaign, organized by type and thematic feel to help you find the perfect fit for your setting.

Name Type Feel
Valdris IronholdAncient EmpireMartial, enduring, dwarven
AethermereSacred KingdomDivine, celestial, elven
DravencourtFallen RealmGothic, haunted, human
KorvanisIron DominionAuthoritarian, industrial
EldrathorEternal EmpireArcane, timeless, high elf
MourngardDark KingdomTragic, cursed, undead
SolenvaleRadiant RealmHopeful, pastoral, halfling
VorlennStorm CrownTempestuous, coastal, human
AshenveilCursed KingdomFire-scarred, forbidden
CrystalvaleArcane EmpireMagical, crystalline, gnomish

Types of Fantasy Kingdoms

Understanding the political and cultural structure of your kingdom helps you choose a name that fits. Each type carries different expectations for governance, military, magic, and society.

Empire

A vast, multi-ethnic state ruled by an emperor or empress. Empire names project scale, ambition, and permanence — often using hard consonants and grand suffixes like -dominion or -empire.

Realm

A kingdom or territorial domain, often smaller and more culturally unified than an empire. Realm names tend toward the poetic and natural — -vale, -mere, -moor, and -wood are common.

City-State

An independent sovereign city that controls surrounding territory. City-state names are compact and urban, often ending in -gate, -port, -spire, or standing as single powerful words.

Dark Kingdom

A realm defined by tragedy, curse, or malevolent rule. Dark kingdom names use harsh sounds, shadowy imagery, and somber suffixes like -gard, -veil, -fen, and -mark.

Famous Fantasy Kingdom Names

The most iconic fantasy kingdoms share common traits: they are easy to pronounce, visually evocative, and culturally distinctive. Studying these names helps you craft your own.

"Gondor, Rohan, Mordor"
— Middle-earth (J.R.R. Tolkien). Short, guttural, and geographically grounded.
"Westeros, the Seven Kingdoms"
— A Song of Ice and Fire (G.R.R. Martin). Historical realism with fantasy scale.
"Waterdeep, Baldur's Gate, Neverwinter"
— Forgotten Realms (D&D). Compound names blending geography with function.
"Skyrim, High Rock, Morrowind"
— The Elder Scrolls. Descriptive, elemental, and culturally coded.

How to Name Your Fantasy Kingdom — 3-Step Guide

Follow this structured approach to create a kingdom name that feels authentic, memorable, and perfectly suited to your world.

1

Define the Kingdom's Identity

Determine the kingdom's government type, dominant culture, climate, and historical pivotal events. A theocracy will sound different from a merchant republic or a warlord's domain.

2

Choose Phonetic and Linguistic Roots

Select real-world languages that match your kingdom's feel — Old Norse for northern realms, Latin for empires, Gaelic for mystical lands. Blend root words with fantasy suffixes.

3

Test and Refine

Say the name aloud. Check for unintended meanings. Ensure it is easy to spell and remember at the gaming table. Iterate until it feels like a place with real history.

Frequently Asked Questions

A kingdom name generator is a creative tool that produces unique, evocative names for fantasy kingdoms, empires, realms, and city-states. It combines linguistic patterns, historical influences, and thematic elements to generate names suitable for D&D campaigns, novels, games, and worldbuilding projects.

Good D&D kingdom names include Valdris Ironhold, Aethermere, Dravencourt, Korvanis, Eldrathor, Mourngard, Solenvale, and Vorlenn. The best names reflect the kingdom's culture, history, geography, and political structure while remaining memorable and easy to pronounce at the table.

To name a D&D kingdom, consider its dominant culture, historical events, geography, and government type. Use strong consonants for martial empires, flowing vowels for elven realms, and harsh sounds for dark kingdoms. Blend real-world linguistic roots with fantasy elements for authenticity.

A believable fantasy kingdom name follows natural phonetic patterns, incorporates meaningful suffixes (-hold, -mere, -court, -vale), reflects the realm's cultural identity, and avoids overly complex spellings. Names that echo real historical regions while adding fantasy flavor feel the most authentic.

Yes. All names generated by RuneForge are original creations and free to use in commercial projects including published novels, video games, tabletop supplements, and other media. No attribution is required, though we appreciate credit when possible.

An empire name typically projects scale, ambition, and multi-ethnic dominance — often grander and more authoritarian in tone. A realm name suggests a smaller, more culturally unified territory with poetic or naturalistic qualities. Empire names use harder sounds and grander suffixes; realm names favor softer phonetics and landscape-derived endings.