randarium
Names

Project Codename Generator

Create reproducible fictional codenames for projects and releases.

Also known as: project name

seeded · synthetic data

Output

No output yet — set your options and hit .
About this tool, tips & examples

What it does

The Project Codename Generator produces memorable, fictional codenames for projects, releases, and initiatives — up to 100 per run. Codenames in the classic two-word style: easy to say in standups, distinctive in search, and meaningless to outsiders, which is the whole point. Seeded, so the shortlist can be regenerated.

Common use cases

  • Release naming — a codename per milestone or version, generated as a batch so the series feels consistent.
  • Internal projects — refer to unannounced work without leaking what it is (“Project Amber Falcon” reveals nothing).
  • Brainstorming — codenames make early ideas feel real enough to discuss before they have official names.
  • Environments and clusters — memorable names for servers, test environments, and feature branches.

Settings

  • How many — 1 to 100 codenames per run, exportable as text, CSV, or JSON.
  • Seed — the same seed regenerates the identical list — useful when the naming series should be reconstructible.

Privacy note

Codenames are generated locally in your browser and never uploaded. They’re synthetic word combinations; collision with a real product or company name is possible, so search before using one publicly.

FAQ

What makes a good codename? Pronounceable, unrelated to the actual work, and distinct from your other codenames. Avoid anything descriptive — a codename that hints at the feature defeats its purpose.

Can I generate a themed series? Generate a large batch and curate — picking names that share a vibe (birds, minerals, weather) is faster than generating one at a time.

Codename vs product name? Codenames are internal and disposable; product names need trademark checks and taste. For public-facing names, the Business Name generator is the starting point.