Topic: Names in settings
Started by: arxhon
Started on: 2/17/2003
Board: The Riddle of Steel
On 2/17/2003 at 10:49pm, arxhon wrote:
Names in settings
Over the years i've noticed that the hardest thing for players to come up with are names for their characters (for some reason). I've also noticed that the quickest way to set an authentic and believable tone for a game is to use names that make sense within the setting itself.
E.g.: In Oustenreich, would people named Gerhard, Conrad and Maximillian support the setting better than, say, Werfem, Frell and Add'er'Th'julgd? I would say yes.
To that end I compiled a list of German names for my old WFRP campaign. This list works great for Oustenreich (Germany) and Stahl (Prussia).
Additionally, i've just finished compiling a list of hundreds of Anglo-Saxon names (think Beowulf, Aethelred (with that funny AE compound letter) and Cwenthryth) for use in Cyrinthmeir, since that particular country is England Weyrth style. Why Anglo-Saxon? They're a hell of a lot more interesting than John, Bert, Robert and Harold (common middle English names).
If anyone is interested in either of these compilations, feel free to PM me. I'm not putting me email here because it might attract the attention of the dreaded spambots.
Jake, if you want to throw these up in the support section of the TROS site, let me know.
On 2/17/2003 at 10:55pm, Mike Holmes wrote:
RE: Names in settings
Um, you have the Internet dontcha? There are sights like:
http://www.babynamenetwork.com
Select a sex and a language, and you're off to the races. Just pick something that sounds period.
If that's not authentic enough I'm sure someone can find a list of the Anglo-Saxon stuff. Here's one: http://www.behindthename.com/nmc/eng-anci.html
Mike
On 2/17/2003 at 11:15pm, arxhon wrote:
RE: Names in settings
Actually, i checked those sites while i was doing research for my Anglo-Saxon name list. They're...inadequate, for lack of a better word. Babynamenetwork gives you 'Udell' for male names and a half dozen for females. Behindthename has approximately 30 names listed.
On 2/19/2003 at 9:07pm, Sneaky Git wrote:
RE: Names in settings
If you're looking for a large number of authentic-type names, you should take a look at Kate Monk's Onomastikon (Dictionary of Names). Divided by region and era, it's rather impressive.
Here's a link:
http://www.gaminggeeks.org/Resources/KateMonk/
On 2/20/2003 at 2:22am, arxhon wrote:
RE: Names in settings
Holy crap!
That place is good for more than just names. Excellent link.
On 2/20/2003 at 5:38pm, Shreyas Sampat wrote:
RE: Names in settings
Chris Pound's Name Generation Page (http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~pound/) has a great big pile of name lists from all over the world, as well as a few very good word generators (perl scripts) that are easily configurable to produce whatever kind of cool output you want. I highly recommend it.
On 2/20/2003 at 6:18pm, Valamir wrote:
RE: Names in settings
arxhon wrote: Holy crap!
That place is good for more than just names. Excellent link.
Had to check to see if she had Valamir listed under the Goths.
She did :-)
Although I will note that she didn't distinguish authentic goth names from Romanized names adopted by goths...although its not to hard to distinguish...the ones that sound latin are romanized...the ones that sound like pigs grunting are authentic ;-)
On 2/20/2003 at 9:11pm, Mike Holmes wrote:
RE: Names in settings
Onomasticon, Onomasticon. That's what I was trying to remember. There are a couple others like that as well.
Weren't there some good Harn links for names? Again, these thigs will vary in usefulness depending on how realistic/historical you want to be.
BTW, I was going to mention why I like the Babyname sites. They usually have descriptions of what a person with the name in question is supposed to be like. "Mike is a winner, your best friend..." sorta stuff. ;-)
The point is that when I need NPCs I often go and find a name, and then use the associated text to determine what sort of personality the character has. Fun, fun.
Mike
On 2/20/2003 at 10:57pm, Salamander wrote:
Everchanging Book of Names
EBoN is the one I use. You download it and away you go...
http://ebon.pyorre.net/
Works great and can be modified with your own ideas if you so wish. Check out his website, you get a lesser version for free and if you like he only asks for a token (US$10.00) to unlock the whole thing.
On 2/21/2003 at 4:04am, Sneaky Git wrote:
Re: Everchanging Book of Names
Salamander wrote: EBoN is the one I use. You download it and away you go...
EBoN is darn cool...
Mike Holmes wrote: Weren't there some good Harn links for names? Again, these thigs will vary in usefulness depending on how realistic/historical you want to be.
And you can download lists for Harn that run in EBoN. Very cool.