100 Werewolf Names That Are Fierce, Dark, and Unforgettable

By
Elizabeth Hill
100 Werewolf Names That Are Fierce, Dark, and Unforgettable

Werewolf names occupy a fascinating corner of the naming world: they need to feel wild and ancient, capable of suggesting both the human and the beast beneath the skin. Whether you’re naming a character in a novel, a player in a tabletop RPG, a pet with more personality than sense, or you just love names that carry serious mythological weight, the best werewolf names pull from real linguistic traditions, Old Norse, Germanic, Slavic, Celtic, Latin, that genuinely meant something fierce or lupine to the people who used them.

Every name below is a real given name with a genuine connection to wolves, darkness, the moon, the hunt, transformation, or the primal force those themes suggest. Some are ancient and weathered; others are sleek and modern. All of them have bite.

Classic Wolf Names for Werewolves

These names literally mean wolf in their source language, or contain wolf as a root element. They are the most direct choices and carry centuries of use behind them.

Ulric

From the Old English and Old High German Udalriccombining “heritage” or “wolf” with “power.” The wolf reading is the one that dominates in popular usage, and it gives this name a medieval English edge that feels both scholarly and dangerous.

Rolf

A compressed Old Norse form of Hrolfritself a contraction of Hrodwulf meaning “fame-wolf.” It was the name of the Viking leader who became the first Duke of Normandy, which means this name has actual conquest on its resume.

Rudolph

From the Old High German Hrodwulfmeaning “fame-wolf.” Yes, the same root as Rolf, but in its full Germanic form it hits differently: heavier, more formal, with a gothic undertow that the holiday association can’t fully bury.

Wolfgang

Straight Old High German: “wolf-path” or “wolf-journey.” Mozart’s full name was Wolfgang Amadeus, which means one of the greatest composers in history was named after a wolf on the move. It is audacious and it works.

Wulfric

Old English, meaning “wolf-power.” It was used by Anglo-Saxon saints and warriors alike, and it sounds exactly like what it is: a name that has not been softened by centuries of fashionable use.

Beowulf

The name of the Old English epic hero, likely meaning “bee-wolf” (a kenning for “bear”) or possibly read as containing a wolf element. Regardless of the exact etymology debate, it is one of the most iconic Germanic warrior names in existence and lands immediately in a werewolf context.

Adolphus

The Latinized form of the Germanic Adalwulfmeaning “noble wolf.” It has fallen hard out of use for obvious 20th-century reasons, but as a character name it carries a grand, dark authority that is hard to match.

Eadwulf

Old English, meaning “prosperity-wolf” or “wealth-wolf.” Used by Anglo-Saxon noblemen, it has the feel of a name that existed before surnames, when a single word had to carry everything about a person.

Cynewulf

Old English, meaning “royal wolf” or “kin-wolf.” This was the name of an 8th-century Anglo-Saxon poet, which makes it legitimately literary as well as ferocious.

Randolph

From the Old Norse Randulfrmeaning “shield-wolf.” The shield element gives this name a warrior quality that pure wolf names sometimes lack, and it has a long history of use in English-speaking countries.

Arnulf

Old High German, meaning “eagle-wolf.” Combining two apex predators into one name is either overkill or exactly right, and for werewolf purposes it is absolutely the latter.

Fridolf

Old Norse and Germanic, meaning “peaceful wolf” or “wolf of peace.” The contradiction built into this name is exactly the kind of tension a werewolf character thrives on.

Gandolf

A genuine medieval Germanic given name meaning “wand-wolf” or “staff-wolf.” Tolkien famously borrowed it for his wizard, but it existed as a real name in medieval Europe long before Middle-earth.

Lovell

A medieval English name derived from the Old French louvelmeaning “little wolf.” It was a genuine surname-turned-given-name in medieval England, and its soft sound belies its meaning completely.

Lyall

A Scottish name derived from the Old Norse Liulfrmeaning “wolf.” It is understated, legitimately Celtic in feel, and one of the most usable wolf names for a real child as well as a character.

Conan

From the Old Irish and Brythonic conmeaning “wolf” or “hound.” The Conan the Barbarian association adds another layer of ferocity that is hard to argue with.

Conall

Old Irish, meaning “strong wolf” or “powerful hound-wolf.” A name used by numerous Irish kings and saints, it carries genuine Celtic mythological weight.

Cuan

Old Irish, meaning “little wolf” or “little hound.” Compact, ancient, and with a softness that makes the wolf meaning feel like a secret.

Zeev

Hebrew, meaning directly “wolf.” It is used in Israel as a given name and is one of the cleanest, most direct wolf names available: short, sharp, and completely unambiguous.

Vuk

Serbian, meaning “wolf.” One of the most common given names in Serbia, it is monosyllabic and hits like a closed fist.

Vukota

A Serbian elaboration of Vuk, also meaning “wolf.” It has more syllables and more presence, used as a full given name in the Balkans.

Zev

A Hebrew variant of Zeev, also meaning “wolf.” Even shorter and sharper than its parent form, it is one of those names that sounds modern and ancient at the same time.

Lupus

Latin, meaning directly “wolf.” It was used as a given name by early Christians and medieval Europeans, and it is the root of the word “lupine” and the medical condition. Raw and direct.

Lupo

The Italian form of Lupus, meaning “wolf.” Used as a given name in Italy, it is less clinical than its Latin parent and has a certain stylish ferocity.

Luperca

A Latin feminine name connected to lupus and the Lupercalia festival. In Roman legend it was the name given to the she-wolf who nursed Romulus and Remus, which makes it mythologically loaded in the best possible way.

Cathwulf

Old English, meaning “battle-wolf.” Used in Anglo-Saxon England, it combines two of the most potent elements in the Germanic naming tradition.

Moon Names for Werewolves

The moon is the engine of the werewolf myth. These names carry lunar meaning and bring the celestial trigger of transformation into the name itself.

Luna

Latin, meaning “moon.” It is the Roman goddess of the moon and the most direct lunar name in the Western tradition. Its current popularity as a baby name does nothing to blunt its power in a werewolf context.

Selene

Greek, the personification of the moon herself. Selene is the older, more mythologically precise counterpart to Luna, and she drives a silver chariot across the sky every night, which is exactly the energy required here.

Phoebe

Greek, meaning “bright, radiant” and used as an epithet of Artemis in her role as moon goddess. It has been a common given name since antiquity and carries the lunar association with elegance.

Diana

Latin, the Roman goddess of the hunt and the moon. The hunt element doubles the werewolf connection, and Diana has been a given name across Europe for centuries.

Artemis

Greek goddess of the hunt, the wilderness, and the moon. As a given name it is rare but real, and it combines every thematic element a werewolf name could want.

Cynthia

An epithet of Artemis, derived from Mount Cynthus on Delos where she was born. It means “woman from Cynthus” but has functioned as a lunar name since antiquity.

Lucina

Latin, from lux meaning “light,” used as an epithet of Diana and Juno in their roles governing childbirth and the moon. It has been used as a given name in Italy and Latin-influenced cultures.

Mena

From the Greek menemeaning “moon.” Used as a given name in ancient Greece and still found today, it is one of the more understated lunar options.

Ayla

Turkish, meaning “moonhalo” or “halo of light around the moon.” It is a popular given name in Turkey and has spread internationally. The image of light diffused around a full moon is perfectly suited to the werewolf myth.

Aylin

Turkish, meaning “moon halo” or “of the moon.” An elaboration of Ayla, it carries the same luminous lunar quality with more syllables.

Badru

Swahili and Arabic-origin name meaning “full moon.” Used as a given name in East Africa, it specifies the precise phase of the moon that triggers the transformation.

Mahina

Hawaiian, meaning “moon” or “moonlight.” A genuine given name in Hawaii, it has a softness that contrasts beautifully with its werewolf application.

Marama

Maori, meaning “moon.” Used as a given name in New Zealand, it carries the lunar meaning cleanly and directly.

Chandra

Sanskrit, meaning “moon” or “shining.” It is the name of the Hindu moon god and a given name across South Asia for both men and women.

Soma

Sanskrit, a name for the moon as well as the ritual drink of the gods. Used as a given name in India, it is ancient, layered, and carries a ceremonial weight.

Tsuki

Japanese, meaning “moon.” Used as a given name in Japan, it is clean and precise, one syllable in some readings and two in others.

Koray

Turkish, meaning “ember moon” or “glowing moon.” A masculine Turkish given name, it suggests the moon at its most dramatic and threatening.

Names Meaning Dark, Shadow, or Night

Darkness is the werewolf’s element. These names carry genuine meanings of shadow, night, or obscurity and have been given to real people across history and cultures.

Ciaran

Irish, from ciar meaning “dark” or “black.” Borne by two major Irish saints, it is one of the oldest and most legitimate “dark” names in the Celtic tradition.

Kieran

The anglicized form of Ciaran, carrying the same “dark” meaning. It has been a popular given name in Ireland and the UK for decades and still feels fresh.

Dusk

Used as a given name in English-speaking countries, it refers to the transitional hour between day and night. It is rare but documented as a real personal name, and it captures the threshold moment of transformation.

Erebus

From Greek mythology, the personification of deep darkness and shadow. It has been used as a given name and carries an enormous amount of mythological weight in a very small package.

Nyx

Greek goddess and personification of the night. As a given name it is short, sharp, and completely unambiguous. One of the most powerful night names available.

Noctis

Latin, meaning “of the night” (genitive of nox). Used as a given name in fiction and increasingly as a real personal name, drawn from the Latin tradition of night vocabulary.

Keira

An anglicized feminine form of Ciaran, meaning “dark one.” It has been a popular given name in Ireland and the UK and carries the dark meaning with considerable style.

Raven

Used as a given name in English-speaking countries, referring to the large black bird long associated with darkness, death, and prophecy in Norse and Celtic mythology. It is a legitimate personal name with a strong gothic edge.

Draven

An invented name that arose from the film The Crow (character surname Eric Draven) but has since been given to real children. It suggests darkness and corvid imagery without a clean etymology, but it is genuinely used as a given name.

Vesper

Latin, meaning “evening star” or “evening.” It has been used as a given name for centuries and was a genuine ecclesiastical term for evening prayers. The twilight meaning suits a creature of the dark perfectly.

Knox

Old English, from cnocmeaning “round-topped hill.” Its hard, dark sound has made it a popular modern given name, and while the meaning is geographic rather than dark, its sonic quality earns its place in this context.

Darkon

A biblical name, appearing in the Old Testament as one of the servants of Solomon. Its sound is unambiguously dark and it has genuine ancient use as a personal name.

Orpheus

Greek, the legendary musician who descended into the underworld. The etymology is debated, possibly relating to the dark or to a river, but Orpheus as a given name carries an unmistakable connection to shadow and death.

Kali

Sanskrit, meaning “the black one” or “time/death.” In Hinduism, Kali is the goddess of destruction and transformation. Used as a given name particularly in South Asia, it carries enormous dark power.

Morrigan

Old Irish, meaning “phantom queen” or “great queen,” associated with fate, death, and battle in Irish mythology. It has been used as a given name and is one of the most potent dark names in the Celtic tradition.

Melaina

Greek, meaning “the dark one” or “the black one.” An epithet of Demeter and Medusa in Greek mythology and a genuine ancient given name.

Melanthe

Greek, meaning “dark flower.” A genuine ancient Greek feminine name that carries both the darkness and a certain gothic beauty.

Kiefer

A German surname-turned-given-name, meaning “pine tree” or sometimes “barrel maker,” but its association with Kiefer Sutherland’s role in The Lost Boys has locked it into the dark supernatural naming space permanently.

Names Meaning Fierce, Battle, or Warrior

The werewolf is a warrior creature. These names carry genuine meanings of strength, ferocity, combat, or predatory power and bring that energy to the surface.

Gunnar

Old Norse, meaning “warrior” or “battle.” One of the most common and respected names in Viking Scandinavia, it is direct and carries no ambiguity about what it promises.

Ragnar

Old Norse, from regin (counsel or decision) and hari (army, warrior). Made famous by legendary Viking Ragnar Lothbrok, it is one of the definitive Norse warrior names.

Bjorn

Old Norse, meaning “bear.” The bear was the apex predator of the Norse world and the animal most associated with berserker warriors. A berserker-adjacent name for a werewolf is entirely appropriate.

Fenrir

Old Norse, the monstrous wolf of Norse mythology, son of Loki, destined to swallow Odin at Ragnarok. As a given name it is rare but documented in Scandinavia, and it is perhaps the single most powerful wolf name in all of mythology.

Skoll

Old Norse, the name of the wolf who chases the sun across the sky in Norse mythology. The name means “treachery” or possibly relates to a wolf’s growl, and it has been used as a given name in Scandinavian contexts.

Hati

Old Norse, meaning “the one who hates,” the name of the wolf who chases the moon in Norse mythology. As a given name it is rare but carries extraordinary mythological weight for a werewolf.

Arvid

Old Norse, meaning “eagle-tree” or “eagle-forest.” A common Scandinavian given name with a strong, natural, predatory quality.

Leif

Old Norse, meaning “heir” or “descendant,” from the same root as life. Leif Eriksson’s name has made this one of the most recognized Norse names internationally. It is clean and strong.

Thorin

Old Norse, derived from Thormeaning “thunder.” Used as a given name in Scandinavia and made famous by Tolkien’s dwarf king, it carries genuine thunder-god energy.

Soren

Scandinavian form of the Latin Severinusmeaning “stern” or “severe.” Philosopher Soren Kierkegaard made this name iconic, and its cool severity suits a werewolf perfectly.

Cormac

Old Irish, meaning “charioteer” or “son of the raven,” with some interpretations connecting it to hound or wolf imagery. A major name in Irish mythology, borne by the legendary king Cormac mac Airt.

Killian

Old Irish, from Cillianpossibly meaning “little warrior” or connected to the word for strife. An Irish saint’s name with a sharp, modern edge.

Ronan

Old Irish, meaning “little seal” but also used in contexts where the ron root evokes wildness. More importantly, it is a name deeply embedded in Celtic mythology and has a dark, melancholy power.

Alaric

Old Germanic, meaning “ruler of all” from ala (all) and ric (ruler, power). Alaric was the Visigoth king who sacked Rome in 410 AD. The name carries the weight of that destruction.

Drago

Slavic, meaning “precious” or from a root suggesting power and ferocity. Used as a given name across Eastern Europe, it has a hard, predatory sound that its gentle root etymology does not prepare you for.

Kazimir

Slavic, meaning “destroyer of peace” or “one who destroys peace.” Used as a given name across Poland, Russia, and neighboring countries, it is one of the few names where the meaning is genuinely aggressive.

Mirko

South Slavic, a diminutive of names containing the element mir (peace) combined with a martial suffix. Used across the former Yugoslavia, it has a compact, hard-edged sound.

Zoran

South Slavic, meaning “dawn” or from a root meaning “to see clearly.” A common given name in Serbia, Croatia, and neighboring countries, with a sharp, clear quality.

Valdis

Old Norse, meaning “the dead” or “goddess of the slain,” derived from valr (the slain in battle) and dis (divine female being). Used as a given name in Scandinavia, it carries battlefield darkness.

Sigurd

Old Norse, meaning “victory-guardian” from sigr (victory) and vorthr (guardian). The hero Sigurd slew the dragon Fafnir, making this one of the great heroic Norse names.

Ivar

Old Norse, from Ivarrmeaning “bow warrior” or “yew warrior.” Ivar the Boneless was one of the most feared Viking commanders in history.

Grim

Old Norse and Old English, meaning “fierce, grim, masked.” Used as a given name in medieval Scandinavia, it is one of the most direct expressions of dark ferocity available in the name canon.

Ulf

Old Norse, meaning simply “wolf.” One of the most common names in Viking Scandinavia, it is short, hard, and carries the wolf meaning without any softening.

Transformation and Wild Nature Names

Werewolves are creatures of transformation, wildness, and the untamed natural world. These names connect to those themes through their genuine meanings.

Silvanus

Latin, meaning “of the forest” or “forest god.” Silvanus was the Roman god of forests and wild places, and the name has been used by saints and real people throughout history.

Sylvester

Latin, meaning “of the forest, wild.” Pope Sylvester I and the New Year’s Eve tradition in many European countries keep this name in cultural circulation, but its wild-forest meaning is its real power here.

Sylvia

Latin feminine form meaning “from the forest” or “forest dweller.” An ancient name with a long history of use, it connects directly to the wild forest setting of werewolf mythology.

Forest

Used as a given name in English-speaking countries, referring directly to the wild woodland. Rare but genuinely documented as a personal name.

Cain

Hebrew, the name of Adam and Eve’s firstborn son. The meaning is debated (possibly “acquired” or “smith”), but Cain’s status as the first murderer, cursed to wander the earth, aligns perfectly with the werewolf as an outcast figure.

Abel

Hebrew, meaning “breath” or “vanity.” Abel is the eternal victim of Cain, and in werewolf fiction he frequently appears as the tragic human counterpart. The name works here as the other side of the transformation coin.

Roman

Latin, meaning “citizen of Rome” or “strong, powerful.” The Roman wolf mythology, from Romulus and Remus nursed by a she-wolf to the Lupercalia festival, makes Roman a name saturated with wolf mythology by cultural context.

Romulus

Latin, the name of the legendary founder of Rome, raised by a she-wolf. As a given name it is rare but genuine and carries the most direct human-wolf mythology in the Roman tradition.

Remus

Latin, co-twin of Romulus, also nursed by the she-wolf. Remus Lupin in the Harry Potter series made this name explicitly lycanthropic in popular culture, and it is a real given name with ancient use.

Lupin

From the Latin lupinusmeaning “wolf-like.” Used as a surname (and made famous by Remus Lupin), it has crossed into use as a given name, particularly in France, where Arsene Lupin is a legendary fictional character.

Feral

Used as a given name in some communities, meaning “wild, untamed.” It is rare but documented as a personal name and could not be more direct in its werewolf application.

Wilder

An English surname-turned-given-name, meaning “untamed, wild.” It has become fashionable as a first name in recent years and carries a genuine wildness in its meaning.

Hunter

Old English occupational name turned given name, referring to one who hunts. It has been a popular given name for decades and carries the predatory quality of the werewolf naturally.

Chase

From the Old French chaciermeaning “to hunt.” Used as a given name since the medieval period, it is one of the cleaner hunting names in English.

Orion

Greek, the great hunter of mythology. The etymology is debated but the identity is certain: Orion is the supreme hunter figure of the Western tradition, and his name has been used as a given name since antiquity.

Forrest

An English surname-turned-given-name, meaning “dweller near the forest.” The extra R spelling distinguishes it from the common noun and it has been a genuine given name for generations.

Gothic and Occult-Toned Werewolf Names

These names carry a dark, gothic, or supernatural charge without necessarily meaning wolf or moon directly. They are names that feel right in a werewolf story by temperament and history.

Dorian

Greek, from the Dorian people of ancient Greece. Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray gave this name its definitive gothic charge, and it has never fully escaped the shadow of that association.

Theron

Greek, meaning “hunter.” A genuine ancient Greek given name that is direct, strong, and entirely relevant to a werewolf’s predatory nature.

Caspian

From the Caspian Sea, used as a given name (made famous by C.S. Lewis’s Prince Caspian). It has a dark, oceanic, adventurous quality that suits a supernatural character.

Malachar

A variant of Malachai, from the Hebrew meaning “my messenger” or “my angel.” The Old Testament prophet’s name has a dark, prophetic quality that works well in a supernatural naming context.

Declan

Old Irish, meaning “man of prayer” or possibly “full of goodness.” Saint Declan of Ardmore is one of Ireland’s pre-Patrician saints, and the name has a brooding, Celtic edge that far outstrips its gentle etymology.

Griffin

From the Welsh Gruffuddmeaning “strong lord” or connected to the mythological creature. The griffin is a predatory mythological beast, and the name carries that ferocity.

Lachlan

Scottish Gaelic, meaning “from the land of the lochs” or “land of the Vikings.” It has a dark, northern, water-and-mist quality that suits the werewolf’s wild northern European origins.

Desmond

From the Irish Deas Mumhanmeaning “man from South Munster.” It has a dark, brooding quality in sound and has been used extensively in gothic and horror fiction.

Ambrose

Latin, from the Greek ambrosiosmeaning “immortal.” Immortality is central to werewolf mythology, and the name has a scholarly, dark ecclesiastical quality to it.

Caius

Latin, a Roman given name of uncertain etymology. The Twilight saga gave this name its werewolf-adjacent supernatural charge in popular culture, and it has a cold, ancient authority.

Magnus

Latin, meaning “great.” Used by Viking kings and Scandinavian saints, it is a name that simply insists on its own enormity.

Leander

Greek, meaning “lion-man.” A lover who swam the Hellespont every night to reach Hero, Leander is one of the great tragic mythological figures, and his name carries both the predator (lion) and the nocturnal journey.

Corvus

Latin, meaning “raven” or “crow.” Used as a given name, it brings the dark corvid symbolism of death and prophecy into direct naming form.

Dante

Italian, a short form of Durantemeaning “enduring.” The poet Dante Alighieri made this name synonymous with a descent into darkness, and it has been a given name in Italy for centuries.

Blaise

From the Latin Blasiuspossibly meaning “lisping” or connected to fire. Merlin’s father was named Blaise in Arthurian legend, which lodges this name firmly in the dark magical tradition.

Fierce Feminine Werewolf Names

Werewolf mythology is not a male-only domain. These feminine names carry wolf, moon, darkness, or wild nature meanings and bring serious power to a female werewolf character.

Lupa

Latin, meaning “she-wolf.” The she-wolf who nursed Romulus and Remus was called Lupa, and this is the most direct feminine wolf name in the Latin tradition.

Ulrika

The feminine form of Ulric, meaning “wolf-power.” Used in Scandinavia and Germany, it is one of the few feminine forms that preserves the wolf element clearly.

Adolpha

The feminine form of Adolphus, meaning “noble wolf.” Rare, but a genuine feminine given name in the Germanic tradition.

Louve

French, meaning “she-wolf.” Used as a given name in France, it is sleek, direct, and carries the wolf meaning in one of the most elegant languages.

Yrsa

Old Norse, meaning “she-bear” or possibly “wild woman.” A name from Norse and Icelandic sagas, it has a raw, northern ferocity and is used as a given name in Iceland today.

Varga

Hungarian, meaning “wolf” in some folk usages, or “tanner/shoemaker” in the occupational sense. The wolf interpretation has driven its use as a given name in supernatural and dark fiction contexts.

Solveig

Old Norse, meaning “sun-strength” or “sun-path.” The feminine name from Ibsen’s Peer Gynt carries a northern wildness and has been used as a given name in Scandinavia for centuries.

Sigrid

Old Norse, meaning “victorious horsewoman” or “beautiful victory.” A major name in Viking-age Scandinavia, it is strong, ancient, and carries no softness whatsoever.

Astrid

Old Norse, meaning “divinely beautiful” from ass (god) and fridr (beautiful). A name that has been borne by Scandinavian queens and is currently popular internationally, it has a fierce northern quality that suits a werewolf story.

Ragna

Old Norse, from regin meaning “counsel, decision” or “the gods.” A short, hard feminine name from the Viking tradition with a divine and ferocious quality.

Freyja

Old Norse, meaning “lady” and the name of the Norse goddess of love, war, magic, and death. Freyja rode a chariot pulled by two giant cats and chose half the slain in battle. She is not gentle, and this name is not gentle.

Skaadi

Old Norse, the goddess of the hunt, winter, and mountains. She chose her husband by looking only at feet and ended up with the sea god Njord instead of the one she wanted. The name has a sharp, wintry ferocity.

Vali

Old Norse, a name borne by one of Odin’s sons, born specifically to avenge the death of Baldr. It is used as a given name in Scandinavia and carries a vengeance-born quality.

How to Choose the Right Werewolf Name

The most important question is: what kind of werewolf? A tragic, scholarly werewolf who fights his nature calls for something with weight and history, like Remus, Ambrose, or Lupin. A feral, Norse-mythology-rooted beast who has given in completely calls for Fenrir, Ulf, or Grim. Getting the character register right matters more than getting the wolf etymology exactly right.

Sound is doing serious work in these names. Short, hard consonants (Vuk, Grim, Ulf, Zev) feel immediate and predatory. Longer, older names (Wolfgang, Beowulf, Cynewulf) feel ancient and weighty. If you want a name that sounds like it belongs in the 21st century but carries its darkness quietly, options like Kieran, Lyall, Wilder, or Ronan do that job without announcing themselves.

Consider the cultural origin of your setting. A werewolf in a Norse-mythology-inspired world should carry a Norse name. A werewolf rooted in Celtic Ireland should carry Irish or Gaelic names. A werewolf in a contemporary urban fantasy can mix freely, but the name will feel more grounded if it connects to a coherent tradition rather than grabbing randomly across cultures.

For characters who need to pass in human society, the best werewolf names are the ones that work in both registers: Lyall, Hunter, Ronan, Astrid, Diana, and Orion all sound like names a real person could carry, while quietly holding onto something older and wilder. The tension between the ordinary surface and the mythological depth is exactly what a great werewolf name should do.

Whatever you choose, trust the etymology. A name that genuinely means wolf, moon, dark, or hunt will always carry more weight than one invented to sound edgy. The real names have centuries of people behind them, and that accumulated weight is something no invented name can fake.

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