Pokémon Names
Create original Pokémon-style names for fan games, OC Pokémon, and creative projects.
Famous Pokémon Names That Nailed It
Real-world names that became iconic. Here's what makes them work.
A perfect portmanteau that tells you exactly what this Pokémon is — a charring lizard — while sounding powerful and iconic enough to define a generation
Derived from the German word for doppelganger, this ghost-type name carries dark, otherworldly weight while being short and punchy enough to shout in battle
The fairy-type Eeveelution perfectly blends sylvan (woodland) with the Eevee family suffix, creating a name that feels elegant, magical, and instantly on-brand
Pokémon names are a craft unto themselves. The best ones compress a creature's essence into a single invented word — blending real-world language roots, animal traits, elemental themes, and a dash of whimsy. Names like Charizard, Gengar, and Sylveon feel both natural and fantastical, hinting at the Pokémon's type and personality without spelling it out.
Whether you're designing original Pokémon for a fan game, creating an OC for fan fiction, or simply exploring the art of creature naming, the best Pokémon names follow a few consistent patterns: portmanteaus of relevant words, Latin or Japanese roots, onomatopoeia, or evocative phonetic combinations that sound powerful, cute, or mysterious depending on the type.
Our collection covers names across every elemental type — fire, water, grass, psychic, ghost, dragon, and more — giving you a ready library of creative Pokémon-style names to inspire your next design.
Tips for Choosing Pokémon Names
Blend two relevant words together — type, habitat, animal, or behavior — to create a natural-sounding portmanteau that hints at the Pokémon's identity.
Use Latin, Greek, or Japanese roots for a sense of depth and authenticity — Pokémon naming draws heavily from all three languages.
Match the phonetics to the Pokémon's personality: hard consonants (k, g, r) feel powerful and aggressive; soft sounds (s, l, m) feel gentle or mysterious.
Keep names to two or three syllables for memorability — the most iconic Pokémon names are almost always short.
Test your name by shouting it as a battle command — if it sounds natural and exciting to call out in a fight, it works.
Frequently Asked Questions
Game Freak's localization teams typically create English Pokémon names using portmanteaus, puns, Latin/Greek roots, or phonetic adaptations of the Japanese originals. Most names hint at the creature's type, habitat, or behavior.
A good fan Pokémon name feels like it could belong in the official games — short, pronounceable, slightly invented-sounding, and subtly hinting at the creature's element or personality without being too on-the-nose.
Yes — many official Pokémon names are built directly on real animals (Caterpie, Pidgey, Magikarp). Combining an animal name with a type-relevant modifier is one of the most reliable naming formulas.
Legendary names tend to be more grandiose and mythological — drawing from gods, celestial objects, ancient languages, or elemental forces. They often sound heavier and more deliberate than standard Pokémon names.
Not always, but it helps with memorability. Fire-types with names containing 'char', 'igni', or 'flare' instantly communicate identity. That said, some of the most memorable Pokémon have names that subvert expectations.
How to Create Original Pokémon Names
Start With the Pokémon's Core Identity
Use Portmanteaus and Blends
Draw From Latin, Greek, and Japanese
Match Sound to Personality
Test Across Contexts
Related Categories
Curious about what names mean? Explore Name Meanings →