DnD Kobold Name Generator

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DnD Kobold Name Generator

The DnD Kobold Name Generator helps you name every trap-setting, tunnel-digging, dragon-worshipping little menace in your world. Use the generator at the top of the page to roll six kobold names at a time, then drop them straight into your encounter notes, lair maps, or villain rosters.

Kobolds are small, but they bring huge personality. A good kobold name should hiss, snap, and sound like it echoes off stone tunnel walls.


What Makes a Great DnD Kobold Name?

Kobold names usually feel:

  • Short
  • Sharp
  • A little funny and a little dangerous

Here’s what tends to work best.

  • Hissy, choppy first names
    Names with lots of k, s, z, and r sounds feel very kobold:
    • Skrik Flintscale – nervous trap-scout with big eyes.
    • Razzik Trapfang – proud of every hurtful little device he’s ever built.
    • Drazik Dustscale – covered in tunnel dust and proud of it.
  • Surnames tied to traps, tools, and tunnels
    Kobolds live underground and love contraptions. Surnames like:
    • Flintscale, Rustscale, Coalclaw
    • Trapwrench, Burrowtail, Tunnelclaw
    • Sootsnout, Ratgnaw, Sparkfang
    These surnames instantly say:
    • “I live in tunnels.”
    • “I chew on metal and rocks.”
    • “I probably built the spike trap you just stepped on.”
  • Names that are fun to shout at the table
    If you can easily shout, “Skrik Trapwrench ducks behind the ballista!” during combat, it’s perfect.
  • Just a bit of comedy
    Kobolds are dangerous, but they’re also funny. Names like Nazrik Ratgnaw or Snik Dustnose make everyone smile while still feeling on-theme.

If a name makes you think of a scaly little gremlin yelling about traps, it’s doing exactly what we want.


Kobold Name Styles for Different Roles

You can steer the generator toward different kobold roles just by which names you pick.

Trapmasters and Tinkerers

These are the engineers, mechanics, and “don’t touch that!” types:

  • Skrik Trapwrench – knows how every trap works and where every spare part is.
  • Vrazik Gearsnout – walks around with goggles and pockets full of gears.
  • Grizzi Flintscale – loves explosives a bit too much.

Look for surnames with wrench, gear, spark, flint, torch, splitter, slinger.

Tunnel Diggers and Miners

Hardworking kobolds with shovels, picks, and bad posture:

  • Nazrik Burrowtail – can dig a new tunnel faster than you can map it.
  • Drazik Stonebiter – chews on rocks to “test their quality.”
  • Skrit Dustscale – permanently covered in dust and proud of it.

Pick surnames like Burrowtail, Stonebiter, Dustscale, Tunnelclaw, Pitbiter, Ashburrow.

Dragon-Obsessed Fanatics

These kobolds see dragons as gods and themselves as Very Important:

  • Krizza Flamefang – paints fake “dragon marks” on his own scales.
  • Vrakka Ashscale – collects burnt bones as holy relics.
  • Zakka Cinderclaw – insists she personally serves a great red dragon.

Grab surnames with flame, cinder, scorch, burn, ember, torch for these.

Cowards, Scouts, and Skirmishers

The “poke then run” kobolds:

  • Snik Dustrunner – hits and runs before anyone can blink.
  • Rikra Ashwhisk – good at hiding in smoke and shadows.
  • Tikrik Ratgnaw – sneaks through pipes and tiny holes.

Look for runner, whisk, gnaw, lash, rattle, slink-ish vibes.


Kobold Tribes, Families, and Clans

The generator also gives you enough material for full kobold communities.

Shared Surnames = Shared Tunnels

If multiple kobolds share Rustscale or Trapfang, they’re probably related:

  • The Rustscale family might be known for old, re-used armor.
  • The Trapfang line could hold the title “Chief of Traps” in the tribe.
  • The Flintscale clan might worship fire and explosions a bit too much.

Generate multiple batches, keep everyone with the same surname, and you’ve got a whole family or sub-clan inside a tribe.

Tribe Names from Surnames

You can even use surnames as tribe names:

  • Tribe Flintscale – fire-obsessed, loves torches and alchemy.
  • Tribe Tunnelclaw – impossible maze of tunnels, constant ambushes.
  • Tribe Ratgnaw – lives in sewers or under-city warrens.

One click gives you NPC names and a tribe name at the same time.


How to Use the DnD Kobold Name Generator

Here’s a simple, fast way to use the generator when prepping a session:

  1. Generate six names before a kobold encounter
    Look at them and decide:
    • Who is the leader?
    • Who is the trapmaster?
    • Who is the unlucky guard on duty?
  2. Click to copy the ones you like
    Paste them directly into your encounter notes or VTT tokens:
    • Skrik Flintscale – trap boss
    • Nazrik Burrowtail – nervous digger
  3. Give each named kobold one job and one quirk
    • Job: trapsetter, digger, guard, shaman, dragon-priest, scavenger.
    • Quirk: obsessed with shiny things, terrified of loud noises, talks to bones, hoards spoons.
  4. Reuse surnames to show connections
    • Skrik Trapfang, Razzik Trapfang, Grik Trapfang – same trap-happy family.
    • Drazik Dustscale, Nazrik Dustscale – cousin miners.
  5. If you need a whole lair, keep rolling
    Use multiple batches to name:
    • The chief
    • The shaman
    • The trap crew
    • Two or three loudmouth warriors
    • One terrified messenger

You can give your kobold dungeon a full cast of named NPCs in a few minutes.


Kobolds as Comic Relief and Real Threats

Names help you decide how kobolds behave at the table.

  • Comic relief:
    • Names like Snik Dustnose or Nazrik Ratgnaw lean into silliness.
    • Let them bicker, panic, and brag about terrible inventions.
  • Real danger:
    • Names like Vrakka Cinderfang or Drazik Trapwrench sound more serious.
    • These kobolds might lead well-organized ambushes and lethal traps.

You can mix both in the same tribe: a scary leader, a terrifying trapmaster, and a crowd of ridiculous underlings with squeaky voices.


DnD Kobold Name Ideas (Examples)

Here are 50 kobold names with quick hooks you can drop straight into your campaign:

  • Skrik Flintscale: Nervous trap-tester who sets everything off “just to be sure.”
  • Razzik Trapfang: Boasts that no adventurer has made it through his hallway alive.
  • Drazik Dustscale: Covered in tunnel dust, proud of every new scratch on his armor.
  • Grakki Rustclaw: Hoards old, rusty blades and calls them “antiques.”
  • Nazrik Burrowtail: Can dig a tunnel faster than most humans can sprint.
  • Zikri Sootsnout: Smells like smoke and swears fire is “friendly if you know it.”
  • Trikka Trapwrench: Carries three wrenches, none the right size.
  • Vrazik Tunnelclaw: Paints claw marks on walls to mark “secret shortcuts.”
  • Skrit Ratgnaw: Always chewing on something that probably isn’t food.
  • Hazzik Gearsnout: Dreams of building a walking, biting, burning trap-machine.
  • Krizza Cinderfang: Thinks she is destined to serve a great fire dragon.
  • Drik Dustrunner: Perfect for hit-and-run javelin attacks along narrow tunnels.
  • Snik Ashwhisk: Sniffs the air and claims he can smell “surface folk fear.”
  • Zekzi Torchscale: Always volunteers to carry the torch, even when not asked.
  • Grizzi Nailfang: Has nails in his pockets “for building… and for biting.”
  • Vrakka Stonebiter: Test-bites rocks to see if they’re worth mining.
  • Tazrik Screechscale: War-cry sounds like a kettle boiling over.
  • Rizza Ashscale: Smudged with soot, insists it’s “war paint.”
  • Haskar Burrowbiter: Chews support beams when bored, to everyone else’s horror.
  • Skarn Trapburn: Mixes oil and fire traps a little too enthusiastically.
  • Vrisk Dustgnaw: Eats crumbs, dirt, and sometimes dropped ration bars.
  • Mikki Flintclaw: Has a talent for making sparks even without flint.
  • Drizzi Tunnelburn: Accidentally set part of the lair on fire once. Only once.
  • Skiv Ratwhisk: Uses rats as early warning systems and snack sources.
  • Rax Spikeclaw: Decorates his armor with sharpened bits of metal scrap.
  • Zissa Ashrattle: Shakes a pouch of bones when she wants to seem important.
  • Grik Torchfang: Loves lighting things on fire so much it worries other kobolds.
  • Drakka Pitbiter: Claims no pit trap is safe until he has personally fallen into it.
  • Kizzi Screechsnout: Loudest voice in the tribe, even when whispering.
  • Vrrix Dustscale: Keeps careful maps of the tunnels hidden under his bedding.
  • Skraska Coalclaw: Works in the hottest part of the lair and enjoys it.
  • Trizza Rustgnaw: Chews rust off old armor and calls it “cleaning.”
  • Drezik Burrowrunner: Used as a messenger because he knows every shortcut.
  • Hrak Spikefang: Believes bigger spikes equal more respect.
  • Zrissi Sootscale: Paints spiral patterns in soot across her arms before battle.
  • Rikra Tunnelburn: Likes hot tunnels and glows with faint, ember-orange eyes.
  • Grakka Scrapclaw: Builds armor from pots, pans, and bits of broken shields.
  • Sakrik Geargnaw: Chews on gears while thinking through new trap ideas.
  • Nerik Dustnose: Constantly sneezing dust, very offended if you mention it.
  • Vizzi Torchwhisk: Uses torches like batons when pointing out orders.
  • Kren Ashscale: Oversees the ash pits where waste and offerings burn together.
  • Razzik Ratbiter: Swears he can speak fluent “rat.” No one has proved him wrong.
  • Skivra Stonewhisk: Wears a little stone charm on a string for “luck.”
  • Grizzi Spikeclaw: Acts tough but hides behind bigger kobolds in real fights.
  • Zakki Screechtail: Uses his tail to bang out signals on metal pipes.
  • Drdrik Flintburn: Works in the forge and smells like smoke and hot iron.
  • Vrazik Tunnelrunner: Handles scouting missions, rarely seen standing still.
  • Tikka Nailscale: Proud of her carefully polished claws and nails.
  • Rizzik Cinderclaw: Loves campfire stories about dragons and bigger kobold lairs.
  • Skriva Rustfang: Keeps a tally of “bigfolk” defeated scratched into his shield.