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Dragon Age Qunari Name Generator

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Dragon Age Qunari Name Generator

Generate Qunari names from the Dragon Age universe — the large, horned people of Par Vollen whose rigid philosophical system, the Qun, shapes every aspect of their lives including how they are named. Qunari names are built from a Turkish-influenced phoneme pool: female names open with melodic prefixes (Naz, Tamg, Solm, Yasem) and close with characteristic endings (-azlik, -elek, -onal, -umer); male names have harder onsets (Askh, Gurh, Jarv, Yagm, Ozk) paired with similarly structured suffixes. Converted Qunari adopt the Qun's role-based naming rather than personal names, but those of Vashoth and Tal-Vashoth background keep given names of this style. Perfect for Dragon Age RPG campaigns featuring Qunari or Vashoth characters, fan fiction involving the Iron Bull, Sten, or original Antaam soldiers, and any project that needs names with the disciplined, steppe-warrior quality of the Qun's people.

Qunari Name

Hatet
Asalit
Ozenay
Stonal
Arme

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Dragon Age Qunari Name Generator

Qunari names in Dragon Age have a distinctive Turkish-influenced phoneme palette that immediately marks them as separate from the human, elven, and dwarven naming traditions of Thedas. This generator produces single names — both male and female — built from phoneme pairs that capture the Qunari sound: female names open with prefixes like Naz, Tamg, Solm, and Yasem paired with characteristic endings (-azlik, -elek, -onal, -umer, -enli); male names use harder onsets like Askh, Gurh, Jarv, and Yagm with complementary suffixes. Both genders produce names that feel distinctly Qunari while maintaining the accessibility of the in-game naming tradition.

Note that within the Qun, most converts take titles based on their role rather than personal names — Ben-Hassrath, Antaam, Arvaarad, and similar. The names generated here are appropriate for Vashoth and Tal-Vashoth who were born outside the Qun or chose to leave it, as well as for Qunari characters in settings that allow personal names rather than role-designations.

The Qunari and the Qun

The Qunari are the people of Par Vollen — large, often horned humanoids whose civilization is organized around the Qun, a rigid philosophical and social system that dictates every aspect of life from diet to duty. Within the Qun, individuals are defined entirely by their function: a soldier is their rank, a craftsperson is their craft, a priest is their role in the Chantry of the Qun. The concept of personal identity as separate from social function is, to an orthodox Qunari, a form of spiritual confusion. The Qun's strength is its perfect social efficiency; its weakness is that it leaves no space for those who cannot or will not fit their designated role.

Those who reject the Qun — the Tal-Vashoth — are often portrayed as dangerously unmoored, stripped of the identity the Qun provided without anything to replace it. The Iron Bull (Hissrad before he became Tal-Vashoth, then Bull) represents one of Dragon Age: Inquisition's most thoughtful explorations of identity, loyalty, and what it means to define yourself when the system that defined you is gone. Vashoth, born outside the Qun entirely, navigate Thedas without the burden or protection of its strictures, carrying personal names that mark their distance from Par Vollen.

How to Use Qunari Names

  • Name Vashoth and Tal-Vashoth characters for Dragon Age campaigns and fan fiction
  • Create the Qunari soldiers and Ben-Hassrath agents your party encounters in Kirkwall or Tevinter
  • Give the Iron Bull's kith and former colleagues authentic Qunari names
  • Name the Qunari diplomat or Arishok who confronts your characters at a critical plot moment
  • Create the Vashoth mercenary who has made peace with their identity outside the Qun
  • Name the Antaam warrior who becomes your unexpected ally against a greater threat

What Makes a Good Qunari Name?

Okurhan

Compound prefixes like Askh, Gurh, Jarv, and Ozk give male Qunari names a physical weight that matches the species' imposing presence — names built for warriors and soldiers

Yazemin

Female names like Yasem, Tamg, and Solm have a resonant, multi-syllabic quality, paired with suffixes that include -emin, -aner, -enli, and -onal — longer and more melodic than male counterparts

Tamgay

The Turkish-influenced phoneme palette — featuring sounds like -uhan, -azim, -ishok, and -utlu — gives Qunari names a geographic flavor distinct from all other Thedas naming traditions

Example Qunari Names

Okurhan Solihan Yazemina Basat Tamgay Gurharad Karden Nasanem Arisen Jarvalit

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the naming style for Qunari names? +
Qunari names draw on a Turkish-influenced phoneme palette with compound prefixes and characteristic suffixes. Female names have longer, more melodic forms (Nazlihan, Tamgay, Solmen); male names use harder onsets (Askh, Gurh, Jarv, Ozk) with firm suffixes. The phoneme set is unique in Thedas and immediately distinguishes Qunari characters from human, elven, or dwarven naming.
Can I use these names in published work? +
Yes — all generated names are free to use in personal or commercial projects. The names are procedurally generated from phoneme components and are not copies of specific named Qunari characters from the Dragon Age games.
Is this generator free? +
Yes, the Dragon Age Qunari Name Generator is completely free with unlimited generations and no account required.
What is the difference between Qunari, Vashoth, and Tal-Vashoth? +
Qunari are followers of the Qun — the philosophical system from Par Vollen. Vashoth are qunlat for those born outside the Qun, with no obligation to it. Tal-Vashoth are those who left the Qun by choice, considered dangerous by orthodox Qunari because they rejected the identity the system provided. All three groups may carry the personal names this generator produces.
Do Qunari use personal names? +
Within the Qun, most individuals use titles based on their social role rather than personal names — a soldier is their rank, a craftsperson is their craft. The names generated here are appropriate for Vashoth (born outside the Qun) and Tal-Vashoth (those who left the Qun), who carry personal names to mark their identity outside the system.