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Potion Name Generator

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Potion Name Generator

Generate evocative names for magical potions, elixirs, tonics, and alchemical brews. Whether you're stocking a fantasy apothecary, equipping adventurers in your tabletop RPG, writing a witch's recipe book, or building an alchemy system for a game, a great potion name makes it feel real. This generator produces names in two styles. The English style pairs a container word — Potion, Elixir, Flask, Draught, Philter, Tonic, or Brew — with an effect or property, creating names like 'Elixir of Healing', 'Draught of Invisibility', 'Potion of Ancient Wisdom', or 'Tonic of the Moon'. The French style applies the same structure with authentic French terminology, producing names like 'Élixir d'Agilité', 'Fiole de Force Brute', or 'Philtre de Rêves'.

Potion Name

Potion of Immobilizing
Phial of Precision
Potion d'Amour
Tonic of Truth
Phial of Endless Time

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About the Potion Name Generator

A potion's name is its advertisement, its warning label, and its promise all at once. "Elixir of Invisibility" tells you what it does. "Draught of Eternal Sleep" tells you to be careful who you serve it to. "Brew of the Archmage" tells you this isn't something you find in a market stall. This generator produces both English and French potion names to give your alchemical inventory variety and flair.

The English format follows the classic "Container of Effect" structure — pairing container words like Potion, Elixir, Flask, Draught, Philter, Tonic, Brew, Vial, and Phial with an extensive pool of effects and properties. The range covers everything from standard adventuring supplies ("Elixir of Healing", "Flask of Invisibility") to exotic and sinister options ("Brew of Bloodlust", "Phial of Eternal Rage", "Vial of Mind Control"). The French format applies the same structure with authentic French terminology — "Élixir d'Agilité", "Philtre de Force Brute", "Fiole de Rêves" — ideal for settings with a more continental or high-fantasy flavour.

Whether you're stocking a magic shop, building an alchemy system, writing a witches' recipe compendium, or equipping your adventurers, these names make every bottle feel like it has a story.

Potions in History and Fantasy

Historical Concoctions

Long before fantasy RPGs codified the "potion of healing", alchemists and apothecaries sold real concoctions with evocative names. Theriac, the legendary cure-all of antiquity, was a complex preparation of dozens of ingredients. Aqua vitae — the "water of life" — was distilled spirit believed to have healing properties. Love philters, sleeping draughts, and restorative tonics were staple products of historical herbalists and poisoners alike, all sold with names that promised specific effects.

Potions in Games and Fiction

The fantasy potion has become an iconic game element from Dungeons & Dragons to World of Warcraft. In these systems, named potions fill adventurers' bags with distinct items, each with a specific function. The Witcher's alchemy system names decoctions and potions after their primary ingredients and intended effects. Harry Potter's potions — Polyjuice Potion, Veritaserum, Felix Felicis — are among the most recognisable named items in modern fantasy fiction, showing how a great potion name becomes part of the world's identity.

How to Use These Names

  • Magic item shops: Stock your fantasy apothecary or magic shop with a varied inventory of named potions that players can buy, sell, or steal.
  • Tabletop RPGs: Give each potion in a treasure hoard a name that intrigues the party and creates roleplay moments as they try to identify what it does.
  • Game design: Name consumables, buff items, and special-use bottles in RPG video games, giving each a memorable title rather than generic "Health Potion +1".
  • Fiction writing: Give your witch, alchemist, or herbalist character an inventory of distinctively named preparations that reveal their expertise and speciality.
  • Worldbuilding: Establish which potions are legal, which are controlled, and which are forbidden in your fictional society — the names help define the culture around magic and medicine.
  • Prop making: Label potion vials and bottles for LARP, escape rooms, or fantasy-themed events with authentic-sounding names.

What Makes a Good Potion Name?

Elixir of Healing

The classic "Container of Effect" structure is immediately legible — the container word signals how it's consumed, and the effect word tells you exactly what it does. No identification scroll required.

Draught of the Moon

Named-source potions — "of the Archmage", "of the Oracle", "of the Moon" — imply a legendary origin that makes the item feel more significant and mysterious than a simple effect name.

Élixir d'Agilité

French potion names lend a courtly, scholarly register that immediately signals high-fantasy or continental European setting flavour — perfect for noble courts and prestigious academies of magic.

Example Potion Names

Elixir of Healing Draught of Invisibility Brew of Bloodlust Potion of Eternal Sleep Flask of the Moon Élixir d'Agilité Philtre de Force Brute Tonic of Ancient Wisdom Vial of Mind Control Fiole de Rêves Phial of Vitality Philter of Transcendence

Frequently Asked Questions

What container words are used in the English names? +
English names draw from nine container words: Potion, Elixir, Flask, Draught, Philter, Tonic, Brew, Vial, and Phial. Each has a slightly different connotation — Elixir implies something refined, Draught something consumed in quantity, Philter traditionally a love potion, Brew something homemade or witchy.
Is this generator free to use? +
Yes, completely free. All generated potion names can be used in any personal or commercial creative project without attribution.
What two languages does this generator produce potion names in? +
The generator produces names in both English and French. English names follow the "Container of Effect" format — "Elixir of Healing", "Draught of Invisibility", "Brew of Bloodlust". French names use authentic French alchemical terminology — "Élixir d'Agilité", "Philtre de Force Brute", "Fiole de Rêves" — ideal for continental or high-fantasy settings.
Can these names be used for dark or dangerous potions? +
Yes. The effect pool includes sinister and dangerous options alongside beneficial ones — "Brew of Bloodlust", "Phial of Eternal Rage", "Vial of Mind Control", "Potion of Eternal Sleep", "Elixir of Madness". The generator covers the full spectrum from healing and buffing to cursing and killing.
Is there an API for this generator? +
Yes. FunGenerators provides API access to this and hundreds of other generators. See fungenerators.com for details on plans and integration.
Are the French potion names grammatically correct? +
Yes. The French names use authentic French grammatical structure, with the correct preposition (de, d', du) chosen based on whether the following word begins with a vowel or consonant. Examples include "Élixir d'Âme", "Philtre de Poison", "Teinture du Dragon" — grammatically accurate French alchemical naming.