Romantasy Baby Names: How ACOTAR and Fourth Wing Are Reshaping the Lists

TL;DR: The romantasy genre — A Court of Thorns and Roses (Maas), Fourth Wing (Yarros), Folk of the Air (Black) — is sending fantasy character names up the charts faster than any genre since Game of Thrones. Conrad surged 36%, Cassian is climbing, and Violet/Vi is breaking out. 12 romantasy-coded names below.

Reading time: 6 minutes Last updated: May 2026


Romantasy is a real naming force now

Five years ago, naming your daughter "Aelin" or your son "Xaden" would have read as overly committed to a fandom. In 2026, these names are sitting comfortably alongside Emma and Noah on US baby registries.

A few real data points:

Romantasy now matches Game of Thrones (2011–2019) and Twilight (2008–2012) as a major literary force in baby naming.


Why this trend is different from earlier fandom naming

A few earlier fantasy waves felt borrowed — naming your daughter Khaleesi or Daenerys would mark you as a fan, not just someone who loved a name.

Romantasy character names work differently. Many of them are subtly Anglicized fantasy names that pass as regular names:

This means parents can pick romantasy-coded names without the "she named her kid after a book" awkwardness. The names work both as fandom homages and as standalone choices.


The defining sound of romantasy names

If you've read three romantasy novels you'll notice the protagonist names follow a pattern:

This is intentional — romantasy authors are aware their names get adopted by readers.


12 romantasy-coded baby names worth considering

For girls

1. Violet (Latin, "violet flower" / Fourth Wing) Tripled in usage between 2018 and 2024. The nickname Vi sounds modern; the full name feels Victorian. Pronounced: VYE-uh-let

2. Aelin (Sarah J. Maas's Throne of Glass) Originally a fictional invention but feels rooted in Celtic tradition. Best for parents who want an unmistakably literary name. Pronounced: AY-lin

3. Feyre (ACOTAR / fictional) The female lead of A Court of Thorns and Roses. Spelled to read mysteriously; sounds like "fair." Used by ~80 US babies per year now. Pronounced: FAY-ruh

4. Astrid (Old Norse, "divinely beautiful") Pre-existing name newly fashionable thanks to romantasy crossover. Pronounced: AS-trid

5. Bryce (Welsh, "speckled" / Crescent City) Strong, short, gender-flexible. Pronounced: BRYCE

6. Yrene (Throne of Glass) Less common than Aelin but rising. Has Greek roots (eirene = peace). Pronounced: YEAR-ah-nee

For boys

7. Cassian (Latin, "hollow / Cassian was a Roman saint and an ACOTAR warrior") A textbook romantasy crossover — both classical and fandom-coded. Pronounced: KASS-ee-un

8. Xaden (Fourth Wing) Pure romantasy invention. Spiky, modern. Used by ~60 US babies per year and climbing fast. Pronounced: ZAY-den

9. Rhysand (ACOTAR) Welsh-coded. Comes with the nickname Rhys (already a top-300 name). Pronounced: RYE-sand

10. Azriel (Hebrew, "God is my help" / ACOTAR) Predates ACOTAR by millennia but gained 400% in usage. Pronounced: AZ-ree-el

11. Conrad (Germanic, "bold counsel" / The Summer I Turned Pretty) Up 36% in 2024 — the biggest leap of any boy's name that year. Pronounced: KON-rad

Gender-neutral

12. Sky / Skye (English / Norse, "cloud") Used across multiple romantasy novels. Short, modern. Pronounced: SKY


How to name a romantasy-coded baby without going overboard

Three rules from naming professionals:

  1. Use the name, not the character. Naming your daughter "Violet" reads as literary. Naming her "Violet Sorrengail" (the full Fourth Wing heroine name) reads as cosplay.
  2. Pair with a classic middle name. "Cassian James" feels grounded. "Cassian Rhysand" feels overcommitted.
  3. Ask yourself: would I love this name if I'd never read the book? If yes — it's a great name. If no — keep looking.

For a personalized list of romantasy-adjacent names that fit your family's style and surname, our AI naming engine takes 90 seconds. Try Fablely free →


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