Alien Name Generator

Sci-fi alien names — soft grey, clicky insectoid, or sibilant reptilian.

5.7M+ possible combinations

10 names
  1. Drikt
    Insectoid
  2. Trkakk
    Insectoid
  3. Zkk'
    Insectoid
  4. Aeax
    Grey
  5. Siraus
    Reptilian
  6. Vethiisaiek
    Reptilian
  7. Nuor
    Grey
  8. Trich
    Insectoid
  9. Ishaash
    Reptilian
  10. Bzichuth
    Insectoid

About

Generate alien names for science fiction, tabletop RPGs (Stars Without Number, Lancer, Traveller), and worldbuilding. Each of the three styles uses its own syllable pool tuned to a body plan. Grey style is vowel-heavy and melodic (Aelura, Zharin, Oonash), fitting humanoid aliens, telepaths, and ancient races. Insectoid uses hard consonant clusters and occasional apostrophes (K'tek, Zzrack, Tk'klar), fitting hive-mind species, drones, and chitin-armored xenos. Reptilian uses sibilants and long vowels (Sssarith, Vasshar, Tessik), fitting saurian races, snake-folk, and predator species. About 60 % of names use a 3-part syllable (opener + middle + closer); the rest are shorter 2-part forms for variety. Combination space exceeds 100K per style — each click produces effectively unique names.

FAQ

Do these names work for D&D outer-planar creatures?
Yes, especially the Grey style for celestials and Reptilian for serpentine races (yuan-ti, sahuagin variants). Insectoid fits thri-kreen and formian outsiders.
Why do insectoid names have apostrophes?
Apostrophes signal a click or glottal stop in fiction — a common convention for non-humanoid speech. Drop them if you prefer cleaner output.
Can I use these in published fiction?
Yes. All names are algorithmically synthesized and not copied from any specific franchise.
How long should an alien name be?
Most generated names are 6-12 characters. The 3-part syllable mode produces longer "official" names; the 2-part mode is closer to short conversational handles.

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