About Gnome Names
Gnomes have one of the most delightfully complex naming traditions in D&D — they typically have a very long personal name, a shorter nickname used daily, and a clan name. Gnome names tend toward multi-syllabic, slightly tongue-twisting constructions: Boddynock, Fonkin, Bimpnottin, Loopmottin.
The saving grace (and the fun) is the nickname. No gnome is going to introduce themselves with their full name in casual company.
Common Features of Gnome Names
- Long and polysyllabic: Three or more syllables in formal names
- Mix of consonants: Playful combinations — ck, ddy, ll, nk
- Nicknames: Short, practical, often punny versions of the full name
- Clan names: Often one or two syllables — Nackle, Folkor, Turen
Rock Gnomes vs Forest Gnomes
- Rock Gnomes (the inventors): Often have names with harder sounds — reflecting their love of machinery and gems
- Forest Gnomes: Slightly more nature-attuned names — softer, more like their elvish neighbors
Tips for Naming Gnome Characters
- Always create both a full name and a nickname for roleplay depth
- Artificers and wizards can lean into the complexity — Namfoodle Nackle inventing devices
- The NPC mode adds titles like "the Tinkerer", "Clockheart", or "Brightgear" — perfect for gnome shopkeepers and inventors your party encounters