🏚️ Dystopian Names

Dystopian names should feel like language warped by collapse — too clean, too cold, or too broken to belong to the world we know.

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Famous Dystopian Names That Nailed It

Real-world names that became iconic. Here's what makes them work.

Panem The Hunger Games

Derived from 'panem et circenses' (bread and circuses), this single Latin-rooted word carries the entire satirical weight of the series' critique of spectacle and control.

Airstrip One 1984 by George Orwell

The deliberately mundane, administrative renaming of Britain strips the nation of history and identity — a masterclass in how dystopian nomenclature erases the past.

Gilead The Handmaid's Tale

Borrowed from a Biblical place of healing, the name's religious resonance deepens the horror of its theocratic repurposing, showing how dystopias co-opt language to legitimise power.

Dystopian fiction has a distinctive naming language. Whether you are writing a novel, designing a video game, or running a tabletop campaign set in a crumbling future, the names of your cities, factions, and characters signal the nature of the world before a single plot event unfolds. The genre's naming conventions tend toward two extremes: the sterile and bureaucratic (The Ministry of Truth, District 12, The Collective) or the broken and post-linguistic (Scavtown, The Ash Belt, Craterside). Both serve narrative purposes. Bureaucratic names suggest a controlling power that has imposed order through language; broken names suggest that civilisation has collapsed and people name places by what is left. The most sophisticated dystopian names play with irony — naming a brutal regime something that sounds noble ('The Foundation', 'The Accord') or naming a ruined slum something that once sounded hopeful ('New Eden', 'Sunrise Block'). This gap between name and reality is one of dystopian fiction's most powerful storytelling tools.

Tips for Choosing Dystopian Names

1

Use language that sounds either too clean (suggesting authoritarian control) or too degraded (suggesting collapse) — avoid names that feel comfortably contemporary.

2

Irony is a powerful dystopian naming tool — name your brutal faction something that sounds hopeful, or your ruined city something that once promised prosperity.

3

Draw on Latin, Greek, or bureaucratic language for government and faction names to suggest imposed, artificial order.

4

For slum and fringe zone names, use compound words based on materials, damage, or geography — Ashfield, Cinder Row, The Breach.

5

Consistency matters: the naming conventions of your world's power structures vs rebel zones should feel distinctly different to reflect the social divide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Not necessarily. Many of the most effective dystopian settings have names that feel deliberately ordinary, bureaucratic, or deliberately degraded. The strangeness comes from context, not from the name sounding sci-fi.

Government factions often use abstract nouns — The Order, The Accord, The Foundation — to project legitimacy. Rebel or fringe groups often use more visceral, informal names. The contrast between the two naming registers reinforces the power dynamic.

Yes — numbers are highly effective in dystopian naming because they feel bureaucratic and dehumanising. District numbers, sector codes, and citizen identification numbers are all naming tools.

Dystopian character names often feel like modified versions of ordinary names, bureaucratic designations, or names assigned rather than chosen. The loss of naming agency can itself be a narrative theme.

Dystopian names often suggest ongoing control and order imposed on chaos; post-apocalyptic names suggest the collapse of that order. In practice the genres overlap, and your naming should reflect which power dynamic is dominant in your world.

How to Name a Dystopian World

Decide Your Dystopia Type First

Is your world a totalitarian surveillance state, a corporate oligarchy, a theocracy, a post-war wasteland, or a climate-collapsed ruin? Each type has distinct naming conventions. Authoritarian states impose clean, abstract names; collapsed worlds produce broken, material-based ones.

Use the Naming Register to Show Power

The contrast between how power names things (sterile, noble, abstract) and how the powerless name things (visceral, geographic, damaged) is one of your most effective world-building tools. Consistent application of this contrast makes your world feel internally coherent.

Mine Latin, Greek, and Biblical Sources

Dystopian creators frequently draw from these sources for government and faction names because they carry weight and legitimacy. A single Latin word can load an entire institution with ironic resonance that English equivalents lack.

Build a Naming System, Not a List

The most convincing fictional worlds use consistent internal logic for their naming. Rather than generating random names, develop a system: what rules govern how cities, districts, factions, and citizens are named in your world? Apply those rules consistently.

Test Names Against Your Themes

Every name in a dystopian world should do ideological work. Before committing to a name, ask: what does this name say about the power that chose it? What does it obscure? What does it reveal? Names are political acts in dystopian fiction.

Curious about what names mean? Explore Name Meanings →