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Bandit Name Generator

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Bandit Name Generator

Generate colourful names and aliases for bandits, thieves, outlaws, and rogues. From bold first names paired with fearsome epithets like "Jack the Viper" to grim adjective-prefixed handles like "Mad Riley" or "Sly Morgan", this generator crafts memorable criminal aliases perfect for fiction, tabletop RPGs, video games, and worldbuilding. The generator supports male, female, and neutral name pools, each combining a realistic given name with either a dramatic epithet (the Razor, the Phantom, Black Eyes) or a menacing adjective prefix (Crazy, Ruthless, Swindling). The result is a versatile alias that suits any thief, smuggler, highwayman, or gang leader in your story.

Bandit Name

Elten the Angel
Waggoner the Heister
Brenden the Outlaw
Davion Danger
Shades Hayden

About the Bandit Name Generator

The Bandit Name Generator creates colourful aliases for outlaws, thieves, highwaymen, and rogues. Names come in two flavours: a given name paired with a fearsome epithet — Aaron the Viper, Riley the Phantom, Dana the Swindler — and a menacing adjective prefix paired with a given name — Mad Thomas, Sly Morgan, Lucky Jack. Both styles produce names with the ring of genuine criminal legend.

The generator supports male, female, and neutral name pools, each drawing from a large roster of realistic given names. The epithets and adjective prefixes are shared across all gender pools, giving every combination an authentic outlaw quality — whether you need a medieval highwayman, a fantasy guild thief, a Wild West bandit, or a ruthless street criminal for modern fiction.

Bandit aliases are a staple of storytelling across every genre that involves law-breaking, adventure, or the underworld. This generator ensures your thieves and outlaws have names to match their reputations.

Outlaw Names and Criminal Aliases

Historical Outlaw Aliases

Real-world criminals have always used aliases, both to conceal identity and to build legend. Billy the Kid, Black Bart, Pretty Boy Floyd, Calamity Jane, and Bonnie and Clyde are names that have outlasted the people who bore them. The pattern is consistent across centuries: a given name combined with a descriptor — a physical trait, a personality, a notorious act, or a place of origin — that crystallises a person's reputation into a handful of words. Even today, gang members and street criminals adopt street names following similar patterns.

Fantasy and Fiction Outlaws

In fantasy fiction and games, bandit and thief names follow the same logic but with a heightened, legendary quality. Thieves' guilds, outlaw gangs, and criminal brotherhoods in settings from Skyrim to Dragon Age, from Dishonored to Peaky Blinders, give their members names that announce capability and danger. The adjective-name construction — Sly Fox, Mad Dog, Ghost — is a universal shorthand for someone who has transcended their birth identity and become something more dangerous and memorable.

How to Use These Names

  • Fantasy fiction: Name thieves, rogues, and outlaws in medieval or high-fantasy settings, from street pickpockets to legendary guild masters.
  • Tabletop RPGs: Create memorable bandit NPCs for D&D, Pathfinder, or any fantasy RPG — names players will actually remember.
  • Historical fiction: Assign authentic-sounding aliases to highwaymen, smugglers, and brigands in historical settings from any era.
  • Video games: Populate outlaw factions, bandit camps, and criminal organisations with distinctively named characters.
  • Western and frontier fiction: Generate Wild West-style outlaw names with the flavour of frontier legend.
  • Online gaming personas: Use a bandit alias as a gamertag or rogue character name for online play.

What Makes a Good Bandit Name?

Jack the Viper

Name + epithet — pairing a familiar given name with a menacing noun creates instant characterisation. The familiar name grounds the character in humanity; the epithet announces their dangerous reputation.

Mad Riley

Adjective + name — an adjective prefix tells you everything you need to know before you meet the person. Mad Riley is someone to be wary of; Lucky Quinn is someone who always seems to escape; Sly Morgan is not to be trusted in a deal.

the Phantom

Menacing imagery — the best outlaw epithets borrow from the vocabulary of fear and the underworld: ghosts, vipers, razors, phantoms, reapers. A name built around this imagery carries threat without needing explanation.

Example Bandit Names

Jack the Viper Mad Riley Sly Morgan Dana the Phantom Greedy Tom Blake the Razor Lucky Quinn Scarface Jesse Whispering Jade Drake the Serpent Laughing Cal Brooke the Reaper

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use these names for historical fiction? +
Yes — the given names draw from a broad pool of English-language names spanning many historical periods, from medieval through modern, making them suitable for bandits in settings from any era. The epithet and adjective structures mirror real historical outlaw naming conventions.
Can I access this generator via API? +
Yes — Fun Generators provides an API that includes access to this and other name generators. Visit the Fun Generators API documentation for integration details.
What format do these bandit names take? +
Names come in two formats: a given name followed by a menacing epithet (e.g. "Jack the Viper", "Riley the Phantom") and an adjective prefix followed by a given name (e.g. "Mad Thomas", "Sly Morgan"). Both formats capture the flavour of real and fictional outlaw aliases.
What is the difference between male, female, and neutral names? +
The difference lies in the given name pool — male names draw from a list of masculine given names, female names from feminine given names, and neutral from gender-neutral names. The epithets and adjective prefixes are the same for all three, so the criminal flavour is consistent across every combination.
Is this generator free to use? +
Yes — the Bandit Name Generator is completely free. Generate as many names as you need without any cost or account.
Can I use these names in published fiction or games? +
Yes — all generated names are free to use in personal or commercial projects including novels, tabletop RPG supplements, video games, and screenplays. No attribution is required.