Jump to content

Serious first world problems: How do you name your Characters?


Recommended Posts

For the title question: If I make up custom names, I usually do that in the moment. Look at the portrait, appearance, personality, and voice, ponder a bit "Does this sound like a Kalwhain? Or is it a Bloflof?". Word- and name scambling basically.

It's just gibberish in its own context, but combined with appearance, portrait, and sound etc. it usually makes sense aesthetically.

Edited by Osvir
Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I first got into CRPG's I bought a baby-name book so I could just rifle through it and pick one at random if I liked the way it looked. The book had all kinds of exotic names and odd spellings that looked "fantasy game-ish" to me at the time. Heh.

 

These days I tend to just cobble together a name based on a chr's art looks or game function, with purposeful misspellings that = something that looks like a name at first glance.

 

Maybe for the first chr. in PoE I'll make more of an effort to come up with something less oddball.

“Things are as they are. Looking out into the universe at night, we make no comparisons between right and wrong stars, nor between well and badly arranged constellations.” – Alan Watts
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ulfric
Osric
Eldoth

Not entirely sure. I'm wavering in my decision to play a Deathlike since I decided to play my Bleak Walker wearing nothing but clothes. They can't wear helmets and the head models look a bit stupid, so without proper armour, it could end up annoying me too much. I'm considering a human instead (which is a big woah for me, like, humans?) and if I go with a human, Bleak Walker Paladin, no armour, duelist with a rapier, I'm definitely going with Eldoth.

Eldoth, aedyr aristocrat and heroic douche.

Edit: It also depends on what portraits will be available by release, to see if anything inspires me.

Edited by Luckmann

t50aJUd.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I came up with a cool Charr name in GW2 I like. I'm going to use it here.

 

Baalhaan Barca. A phonecian name. Just sounds cool for a smart strategist/warrior type of guy. So we'll see what class I'll make.

They say hope begins in the dark, but most just flail around in the blackness...searching for their destiny. The darkness... for me... is where I shine. - Riddick

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Usually I would choose a name of a book character that I'm currently into but with PoE I'm thinking of something different. My character is definetly going to be an ex-slave so I want him to have no name at all and instead have a nickname. Something along the lines of "Maggot" or "Rat" :3

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Nice namegenerator! It would be fantastic if it had a culture setting as well. It could be possible that the devs actually patch something similar in at some point, as that should be quite simple. 

 

so Aedyr, Ixamitl Plains and Old Vailia naming conventions should be covered by the link I provided. For Deadfire Archipelegola, Rauatai, The Living lands and The White that Wends, we need to get creative.

 

 

Deadfire Archipelegola:

The language has Inuit roots, which has some beautiful names and sounds, so we can probably steal from there.

 

female: Panninguaq, Nivi, Pipaluk, Ivalu

 

Male: Malik, Nuka, Pavia, Inunnguaq, Aputsiaq

 

Furthermore the Inuit diminutive -raq and -nnguaq, which both mean "little/sweet" and are used with names from both genders, e.g. Pipalukraq and Nukaraq

 

http://www.nordicnames.de/wiki/Greenlandic_Names

 

Rauatai:

Lots of "auauauai" I guess. Based on the Maori language, so let us look there for inspiration:

 

Female names: Hauku, Airini, Ahorangi, Whina, Hahana

Male names: Arapeta, Maaka, Matiu, Rua (seems familiar), Marama

 

http://www.huggies.co.nz/parenting/parents-and-children/maori-baby-names

(I don't feel these fit so well, you probably need to put in some more au.)

 

The Living lands:

It sounds like a very disorganised place and alot of settlers from other places, so I think names from other cultures are all good. I have not been able to establish what the pre-dominant culture is though :( 

 

The White that Wends:

The only thing I have been able to establish is that the Pale elves and Boreal elves of the region have seperate and unique languages. And that the language of the pale elves has some roots in Eld Aedyran http://pillarsofeternity.gamepedia.com/Eld_Aedyran#Eld_Aedyran 

The closest we get to names for the pale elves would probably be using the aedyran names or old english/Anglo-saxon names.

 

Hope this helps a bit and that Josh or some other dev who knows might shed some more light on these unknowns. 

Edited by Polanski
  • Like 6
Link to comment
Share on other sites

My main character's name will be Kvothe. :)

If anyone knows where that name is from we can be friends.

These books have loads of great names 'elodin' would be good for a Mage.

 

I use the silmarillion which has elvish root word dictionary which you then stich together to create a name such as Calenfallenar (green healer) for Druid.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Master.

Quite an experience to live in misery isn't it? That's what it is to be married with children.

I've seen things you people can't even imagine. Pearly Kings glittering on the Elephant and Castle, Morris Men dancing 'til the last light of midsummer. I watched Druid fires burning in the ruins of Stonehenge, and Yorkshiremen gurning for prizes. All these things will be lost in time, like alopecia on a skinhead. Time for tiffin.

 

Tea for the teapot!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm thinking maybe Frodo. Has a nice ring to it.

101.gif

 

:yes:

 

I think I will trawl through some old Gemmell / Feist / Eddings books for a few ideas..... must stop looking at Brian's name generator or will have a list a mile long!

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I usually go for something Gáidhlig female Fia or Faolan male for humans otherwise if I just randomly type stuff and whittle it down to something that sounds about right, helps if you know the setting and the types of names that fit your race/culture but meh.

Alternatively hit up Dwarf Fortress : Stukos, Kulet, Minkot, Quathari, Sareve or Bembul

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I take an aspect of something like a character personality trait, appearance or part of their history and put a word to it.

Like if he was supposed to be a tall imposing fighter, I might take the word "tower" or perhaps "mountain".

Then I find that word in another language. Latin works well most of the time, sometimes I use German / Nordic.

Then I tweak the word to sound more like a name or mash it with an existing name to create a new one.

After that I'll either do the process again for their last name or give them a more common name.

 

So as an example, I want a strong and resiliant fighters name so I'd start with "Tower" and "Stone".

German gives me a cool name with that, Steintrum. Then I'd just give him a simpler name at the front.

Martin Steintrum.

 

For any RPG characters I'll usually use this method as I like to name names that mean something.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I name my characters within the naming conventions of where they're from and their race. Right now, I'm using the wiki as a guide to try to come up with a name for my character. Her name is Antha which is something I came up with on the fly for use in the beta. I want to transform that name to make it sound more Italian unless I find a name I really like. I don't usually pick a name based upon their meaning, but just something that sounds right for that character.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I can't think of a name right away, I turn to history and other languages.

 

Here is how I named my a character Prestogy:

 

I looked for words in other languages that translated well from "trick" or "fraud" and suchlike. I settled on praestigium, which is latin for "Magic Trick" or Illusion. 

 

Praestigium is a bit of a mouthful so I turned to the modern form of the word, Prestige, or the colloquial Presto. It's a little tasteless naming a character after modern form language however, so I looked for another word to compliment Presto. I settled on Prodigy. 

 

Presto + Prodigy = Prestogy. I used an o instead of an i in the form for it to better mimic the actual pronunciation of Prodigy (which is often pronounced Prod-oh-gee).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...