Kingdom Name Generator
Regal names for the realm that rules the map — Valeria, Drakegard, Frostmark, Kingdom of Eldoria. Kingdom names take grand, ancient-sounding endings that imply borders, banners, and a line of monarchs.
Realm names with regal endings — Valeria, Kingdom of Frostmark, Drakegard.
What makes a name sound like a kingdom
A kingdom is bigger than any one city, so its name reaches for grandeur and age. The endings do the work — -ia (Valeria, Eldoria), -mark (a border realm, like Denmark), -gard (a stronghold, from Norse), -heim (a homeland), -reach (a domain). About a third of the time the generator frames it as "Kingdom of [Name]" for a more formal, in-world feel. The result sounds like somewhere with a flag and a thousand-year history.
Great for
- D&D campaign settings — the realm the whole campaign takes place in.
- Fantasy fiction and series — warring kingdoms, fallen empires, the throne everyone wants.
- Strategy-game and map projects — nations on a worldbuilding map.
Building the realm top-down
Name the kingdom first — it sets the flavor for everything inside it. Then fill it with cities, towns, and villages that share its sound. A kingdom called Frostmark naturally hosts towns like Frostford and Winterby. For neighboring or rival realms, the country name generator gives you a non-monarchy flavor.
FAQ
What's the difference between a kingdom and a country name?
They overlap, but kingdom names lean regal (and can carry the "Kingdom of" prefix), while the country generator aims for neutral nation names that work for republics and empires too.
Can I get a single-word kingdom name?
Most rolls are single words (Valeria, Drakegard); about a third add the "Kingdom of" prefix. Reroll for whichever you prefer.
Are these names original?
They're invented combinations of roots and realm suffixes — not real countries. Good for fiction and games; search before commercial headline use.
Related
- Place name generator — all six place types in one tool.
- Country name generator — for non-monarchy nations.
- City name generator — for the capital that rules it.