D&D Drow Names
D&D drow names should sound dangerous, elegant, and socially charged. Use a first name for personal identity and a house surname when the character belongs to a noble Underdark family.
D&D, BG3, Underdark houses, priestesses, exiles, and dark elf names
Generate drow names with meanings, pronunciation, house surnames, faction tone, and lore hints. Create names for D&D 5e, Baldur's Gate 3, Pathfinder, Lolth-sworn priestesses, Seldarine drow, exiles, rogues, wizards, and Underdark houses.
Drow names should sound sharp, political, and dangerous. Choose faction, gender, role, and house-name style to generate names that fit D&D, BG3, or original Underdark-inspired fantasy.
Underdark identity
A useful drow name generator should do more than stack apostrophes and harsh syllables. Drow names carry social weight: first name, house surname, matriarchal prestige, Lolth-sworn faith, Seldarine rebellion, exile, surface life, or a secret life outside the Underdark.
This generator is built for D&D players, BG3 character creation, Game Masters, Pathfinder campaigns, fantasy writers, and worldbuilders who need names with meaning and context. Each result includes pronunciation, meaning, best-fit role, and a lore hint so the name can become part of the character rather than just a label.
D&D drow names should sound dangerous, elegant, and socially charged. Use a first name for personal identity and a house surname when the character belongs to a noble Underdark family.
For Baldur's Gate 3, the big choice is tone. Lolth-sworn names can sound colder, harsher, and more ritualistic. Seldarine drow names can keep drow sharpness while feeling slightly freer, softer, or less house-bound.
Female drow names often sound more formal, longer, and more melodic because matriarchal power shapes the culture. Priestesses, matrons, and noble daughters can use sharper syllables wrapped in elegant endings.
House names should feel older than the character. They can suggest lineage, patronage, blood, magic, web, silence, cruelty, exile, or a sacred tie to Lolth. Apostrophes should mark syllable breaks, not decoration.
Naming conventions
Drow names often use harsh sibilants and stops: X, Z, Q, K, V, DR, and sharp TH sounds. The result should feel elegant but dangerous. A name that is too smooth can drift toward high elf; a name that is too hard can become generic villain noise.
Apostrophes should mark syllable breaks, especially in house names. Use one meaningful break rather than scattering apostrophes everywhere. If the name cannot be pronounced at a D&D table or in BG3 roleplay, it needs to be simplified.
Say the name aloud once as a player, once as a DM, and once in combat. If it breaks the scene, shorten it or remove one cluster.
Build your own
Use these pieces to shape a drow name by hand. First names should carry personality; house names should carry politics, bloodline, faith, or reputation.
| Prefix | Meaning feel | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Qil / Xil | sharp, secretive, blade-like | Rogues, assassins, scouts |
| Jha / Myra | formal, feminine, priestly | Female drow, priestesses, matrons |
| Riz / Zar | cold, ambitious, martial | Warriors, house guards, rivals |
| Veld / Vel | shadow, silence, undercity grace | Neutral names, exiles, spies |
| Nael / Nym | old blood, hidden magic, night | Mages, wizards, nobles |
| Mal / Kel | hard authority, oath, survival | Male drow, soldiers, renegades |
| Suffix | Sound feel | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| -ra / -ae | feminine, melodic, formal | Priestesses, noblewomen, matriarchs |
| -stra / -vrae | high-status, ritual, severe | Lolth-sworn names, house heirs |
| -th / -zt | short, clipped, hard | Male drow, warriors, duelists |
| -rin / -dyn | quick, agile, usable | Rogues, scouts, neutral names |
| -loth / -lloth | Lolth homage, religious pressure | Priestesses or zealots |
| -el / -eth | softer, exile-friendly, Seldarine tone | Seldarine drow, surface dwellers |
| Piece | Function | Example style |
|---|---|---|
| Do' | house affiliation marker | Do'Veldrin |
| Baen / Alean | blessed or noble line | Baen'Quel |
| Auvry | bloodline, descent, inherited power | Auvry'Xundrae |
| Arken | magic, study, old arcane house | Arken'Zarvrae |
| Veld / Xun | shadow, silence, undercity ties | Veld'Qilryn |
Female, male, and neutral ideas
Female drow names can be longer, more melodic, and more ceremonial, especially for priestesses, nobles, and matrons.
Male drow names often sound shorter, sharper, and more clipped, with endings that work in quick dialogue and combat scenes.
Exile or surface-dwelling drow can soften the harshest sounds, drop house names, or adopt a chosen surname.
BG3 and faction tone
Use colder, more severe sounds, priestly endings, house surnames, web imagery, and ritual authority. These names should feel dangerous and socially hierarchical.
Keep the drow edge, but soften the vowels or reduce the house pressure. These names can feel freer, less ritualistic, and more suited to surface life.
Exiles may drop a house name entirely. Half-drow can blend a sharper drow first name with a human, surface, or elven surname.
Class and role flavor
Longer, formal, ritual names with sharp elegance and optional Lolth-like religious echoes.
Shorter names with silence, blade, shadow, step, or dusk surnames.
Arcane, house-bound, and old-blood names with magic or tower-like surname elements.
Unusual drow concepts can soften the tone while preserving Underdark roots.
Bonus intent
Some users need drow city names as well as character names. A drow city name should feel old, hidden, and politically dangerous. Combine stone, web, silence, obsidian, chasm, vault, under, shrine, or blade with a ruling house, sacred place, or geographic feature. Keep city names separate from personal names so your world does not sound repetitive.
A drow name usually has a personal first name and, for noble or house-bound characters, a house surname. Exiles, surface dwellers, and renegades may drop the house name or replace it with a chosen name.
The Do' prefix is commonly recognized as a house-affiliation marker in famous drow naming patterns. Use it sparingly for noble house surnames, and treat the apostrophe as a syllable break rather than decoration.
Female drow names often sound longer, more formal, and more melodic, especially for priestesses and matrons. Male drow names are usually shorter, sharper, and more clipped, though outcasts can deliberately break these expectations.
A lore-friendly drow name uses sharp consonants like X, Z, Q, K, V, and DR, meaningful apostrophes, and a tone shaped by Underdark culture, house politics, Lolth-sworn religion, exile, or survival.
For BG3, match the name to the character's faction. Lolth-sworn names can sound colder and more ritualistic, while Seldarine drow names can keep drow sharpness but feel slightly freer, softer, or less house-bound.
Start with a house marker or lineage prefix, then add a suffix that sounds old, noble, magical, or dangerous. Use one apostrophe as a syllable break. The house name should feel like a political identity, not a random dark word.
Treat the apostrophe as a brief stop or syllable break. For example, a structure like Do'Veldrin would be read as two parts: Doh-VEL-drin. If the name is hard to say in combat, simplify it.
Yes. Drow are a specific dark elf tradition, especially in D&D and Forgotten Realms-style fantasy. For a more general dark elf, use the Dark Elf Name Generator; for Underdark, house, BG3, and Lolth/Seldarine themes, use this page.
A priestess name should feel formal, commanding, and ritualistic. Use longer feminine endings, sharper sibilants, and optional Lolth-like religious echoes without copying existing characters.
An exile name can drop the house surname, soften the harshest syllables, or use a chosen surname tied to dusk, ash, path, silence, or freedom. This helps the name show distance from Underdark politics.