Brass gears and gaslit streets deserve a city name that keeps up with them. Steampunk worlds are built on a very specific collision between the elegant and the industrial and the name of a city is where that collision first becomes visible.
Pick something that sounds too clean and the smokestacks do not fit. Pick something too grim and the clockwork towers and airship docks lose their sense of wonder. Getting that balance right means finding something that could believably appear on a Victorian map while still carrying the weight of a world running on steam and ambition.
Whether you are writing a novel, building a tabletop world, designing a game, or simply drawn to the aesthetic of copper pipes and top hats these 93 names are built to sit comfortably in exactly that space.
Cool Steampunk City Names
Cool steampunk names carry the particular confidence of a city that has made something of itself through industry and ingenuity rather than inherited importance. Not grand in an old aristocratic sense but substantial in a way that comes from knowing how things work and building a whole civilization around that knowledge. These names suit the cities that anchor a steampunk world and give travelers something worth navigating toward.
- Ironwick
- Caldermark
- Greyforge
- Brasshollow
- Veldspire
- Ashmere
- Thornvault
- Presswick
- Dunsworth
- Clinkerwick
- Smoggate
- Harkenfield
- Boldvault
- Kelmford
- Sootmark
Victorian Steampunk City Names
Victorian steampunk names carry the other side of the aesthetic. Gaslit evenings, cobbled streets, the kind of architecture that takes its cornices seriously and its engineering even more so. These names suit cities where the drawing rooms and the factory floors exist in the same postal district and where a gentleman’s club might share a wall with a boilerworks and neither party finds this arrangement unusual.
- Gaswick
- Halsworth
- Pendleton
- Quarrymount
- Grimshaw
- Coalport
- Inglefield
- Lampford
- Manswick
- Navygate
- Strathwick
- Tollgate
- Cokemark
- Drakewick
- Chartwick
Industrial Steampunk City Names
Industrial steampunk names belong to the cities built entirely around what they produce. Every street name references a process. Every district exists because of a function. These are the cities where the shift whistle is the most important sound of the day and where the skyline is defined by what comes out of the furnace rather than what a city planner drew on a diagram. They suit worlds where production is power and the most important people in town are the ones who keep everything running.
- Forgemark
- Pistonwick
- Valveton
- Cogmark
- Steamwick
- Boltfield
- Furnaceton
- Gearwick
- Hammergate
- Ingotgate
- Kindlemark
- Leverwick
- Millmark
- Nozzlemark
- Pumpmark
- Rivetwick
Airship City Names
Airship cities occupy a completely different position in a steampunk world. Elevation changes everything. The smog stays below. The view is unobstructed. The docking towers and mooring lines and the particular sound of gas burners keeping something enormous aloft produce a lifestyle and an identity that ground-based cities never quite manage. Names for these places carry lightness and height in the sound of them even when the city itself is anything but delicate in construction.
- Cloudspire
- Aeromere
- Driftmark
- Zephyrgate
- Aetherwick
- Galemark
- Ventworth
- Peakholm
- Lofton
- Highwick
- Gustmark
- Mistspire
- Vapormere
- Skyvault
Underground Steampunk City Names
Underground steampunk cities are the ones the surface world does not always know about. Carved into bedrock, lit by bioluminescent pipes and electric arc lamps, running on geothermal steam drawn from deep enough below that the heat never runs out. These cities tend to be older than they look and harder to leave than expected and the names they carry suggest the specific quality of a settlement that has learned to be entirely self-sufficient because it never had any other option.
- Deepmark
- Cavernstone
- Tunnelgate
- Molefield
- Burronton
- Shaftmere
- Caveholm
- Subgate
- Boremark
- Pitwick
- Mineford
- Downwick
Short Steampunk City Names
Short steampunk names carry weight in a compressed form. A single sharp syllable with the right industrial edge does more atmospheric work than a longer name sometimes manages and in a world of telegrams and pneumatic message tubes brevity has a practical value that steampunk societies tend to appreciate. These names travel fast and land clean.
- Brimwick
- Cogton
- Draven
- Flintmark
- Gromvale
- Holt
- Inkton
- Jorn
- Kelvon
- Lurvick
- Moltwick
Funny Steampunk City Names
Steam-powered everything sounds magnificent in theory. In practice it means something is always leaking, overheating, releasing pressure at unexpected moments, or failing in a way that engineers describe as a learning opportunity. Steampunk cities have a long tradition of names that reflect the honest reality of living inside a civilization held together by ingenuity, optimism, and an enormous quantity of replacement gaskets.
- Boilerham
- Cogblunder
- Driptonville
- Fumington
- Pedalton
- Hissville
- Leakington
- Overheatwick
- Splutterwick
- Rattlecog
What Gives a Steampunk City Name Its Character
The best steampunk names sit precisely between two worlds. Too Victorian and the industrial character disappears. Too mechanical and the elegance that makes steampunk distinct from straight industrial fiction gets lost. Names that carry one element from each side of that divide tend to produce the most convincing results because they reflect the central tension that steampunk storytelling is built around.
Material words combined with geographic suffixes tend to work well because materials sit at the heart of steampunk identity. What a city is made from and what it produces shapes everything about its character. A city built around copper trades develops differently from one built around coal and the name is often the first signal of which world the reader or player is entering.
Building Your Steampunk World Around a City Name
Starting with one city and letting the naming logic of that city ripple outward into the surrounding world is the most effective approach to steampunk world building. If the capital city is called Caldermark the naming conventions of that culture should appear in the surrounding towns, railway stations, and geographic features in a consistent way that makes the world feel like it developed a language rather than having names applied to it from outside.
The relationship between city names in the same steampunk world matters as much as the individual names themselves. An industrial city, an airship port, an underground settlement, and a Victorian administrative capital all occupy different positions in the world and their names should reflect those positions without following the same formula. A world where every city sounds like every other city feels like a setting that was generated rather than imagined.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use these for a steampunk tabletop RPG campaign?
Yes. Every name here was built for creative use. The industrial and underground sections work particularly well for major quest locations. The airship section suits floating city encounters. The short section produces names that work well for locations that appear repeatedly on a campaign map and need to be easy for players to reference quickly across a long session.
What makes a steampunk name feel Victorian rather than purely industrial?
The presence of geographic or administrative suffixes rather than purely mechanical ones makes the biggest difference. A name ending in worth, shaw, ford, or port carries Victorian administrative associations. A name ending in mark, gate, or forge carries industrial associations. The most convincing steampunk names tend to mix elements from both sides rather than committing entirely to one or the other.
Do these names work for a steampunk graphic novel or illustrated world?
Yes and the cool and Victorian sections in particular produce names that look strong on a hand-lettered map or title page. Short names from that section work well for location labels in illustrated panels where space is limited and the name needs to read clearly at a small size.
What is the difference between an airship city name and an underground city name in feel?
Airship city names carry open sounds and words tied to height, atmosphere, and movement. Underground city names tend toward closed, heavy sounds and words tied to depth, stone, and excavation. The same geographic suffix produces a completely different impression depending on what precedes it. Cloudspire reads as open and elevated. Deepmark reads as enclosed and weighted and both of those impressions come from the first word rather than the ending.
How do I name other locations in my steampunk world to match a city name I have chosen?
Extract the logic of the city name rather than copying its structure. If your city uses industrial process words as its first element then nearby towns might use material words, railway stations might use functional words, and geographic features might use the byproduct words like soot, clinker, or coke that the industrial process produces. Consistency of logic rather than consistency of format produces the most convincing named world.
Final Thoughts
A steampunk city name carries the whole aesthetic in miniature. Get the balance between the Victorian and the industrial right and every other detail of the world has somewhere to anchor itself. Find the name that fits the city you are building and the smoke, the gears, and the gaslight will follow naturally.