Discover all Civic Tech Name Generators
Skip list of name generatorsThe Apps Behind Your Next Story

Build worlds. Tell stories.
For novelists, GMs, screenwriters & beyond
Build rich worlds, draft your stories and connect everything with advanced linking and easy references.

Practice your writing muscle
Creative writing practice can be exciting
Jump into 30+ writing exercises—playful, reflective, and style-focused. Build the habit that transforms okay writers into great ones.

Build choice adventures
Branching stories on a visual canvas
Map scenes, connect choices, track resources, and publish interactive fiction people can actually play.

2500+ idea generators
Names, places, plots and more
Beat writer's block in seconds. Over 2500 free name and idea generators for characters, worlds, items and writing prompts.

Catch ideas faster
Roll, pin, and save from your generator workspace
Search every Story Shack generator in one focused workspace, roll quick batches, pin favorites, and stack your best ideas.
Names for civic tech platforms, open data portals, participatory tools and neighborhood-scale public services
Civic tech is the broad space where technology meets public participation, including 311 apps, open data dashboards, participatory budgeting tools, council meeting trackers, election information sites and volunteer coordination platforms. If you need a civic tech name generator, gov tech project names, open data platform names, participatory budgeting app names, community tool names, public interest tech names, civic startup name ideas or a municipal app name generator, this page is built to give you more than a random list. It treats naming as part of the work, so each result can become a platform, agency, pilot, hackathon project or volunteer initiative that sounds like something real residents would actually open, sign up for or trust with their data.
What makes a name fit civic tech?
Names should signal trust, accessibility and neighborhood scale rather than hype. Patterns that work include a place plus a function, a single calm verb, a participation prefix like Open or Co, and short two-syllable handles that read well on a city homepage. The category leans on details such as municipal partnerships, public records workflows, accessibility standards, plain-language drafting, civic user research, open source licensing, mutual aid networks, hackathons, fellowship programs, code-for-city brigades and resident feedback loops. Those details matter because a civic name carries promise. A strong name hints at scope, audience, governance model and intent before a homepage even loads, and it tells residents whether the tool is run by a city, a nonprofit, a coalition or a small volunteer crew.
What can you create here?
Use these generators for 311 reporting apps, open data portals, budget visualization tools, council vote trackers, ballot guides, public comment platforms, permit lookup services, community boards, mutual aid networks, transit alert apps, housing rights portals, environmental sensor projects, neighborhood newsletters, civic hackathon teams, fellowships, code brigades, policy labs, ethics review groups, digital service teams and procurement reform initiatives. They also help with fictional gov tech in novels, near-future games, design fiction prototypes, civic board games, public-interest startup pitches, course projects and grant proposals. The most useful result is rarely the loudest. A name that sounds slightly boring but easy to say at a town hall often beats a clever one that residents stumble over.
Writing and design uses
For writers, the category is helpful when a near-future story or political thriller needs a believable platform, agency, watchdog group or whistleblower portal that does not feel invented for the page. For product teams, it can seed a workshop with rough names that designers, policy staff and community partners can react to. A generated name might become the open source project a fellowship adopts, the nonprofit spin-off that handles a city pilot, or the resident-run tool that ends up in the news after an election. The names work best when you tie them to action: who runs it, who it serves, and what decision it tries to make easier.
How to refine a generated name
Read several results aloud. Imagine each one printed on a city flyer, said by a council member or shown on a phone screen at a bus stop. If a name feels too generic, anchor it with a place, a verb or a service domain. If it feels too clever or too branded, soften it toward a plain civic register that residents and journalists will repeat without irony. Test it for accessibility: can someone hear the name once and still find the website. Keep the tone practical, hopeful, transparent, slightly bureaucratic and grounded, and favor names that still make sense in five years, after the founders move on.
Natural keyword coverage for civic search
Search phrases such as civic tech name generator, gov tech project names, open data platform names, participatory budgeting app names, community tool names, public interest tech names, civic startup name ideas and municipal app name generator point to a real working need: fast inspiration for tools that have to earn public trust. This page is built for that moment between a meeting and a deadline. Use the results as raw material, swap a verb, attach a city or neighborhood, drop anything that sounds like a surveillance product, and keep the option a resident might actually open without hesitation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Get answers to common questions about my civic tech names and how to use them effectively for your creative projects.
How many civic tech names do the generators create at once?
Each of my generators creates 10 unique names per generation by default. You can generate new batches as many times as you need. On average, I see users generate 16 ideas each time they use my generators, giving you plenty of options for your creative projects.
How do I save my favorite generated civic tech names for later?
Simply click the save icon next to any name you like. Your saved names are stored in your browser's local storage and will be available the next time you visit. You can access all your saved names through the saved ideas panel, making it easy to build a collection of perfect names for your projects.
Can I copy generated civic tech names to my clipboard?
Yes! You can easily copy any generated name by clicking on it or using the copy button. This makes it simple to paste names directly into your manuscripts, character sheets, or creative documents. All my generators are designed for seamless integration into your creative workflow.
Can I trust these generators for professional writing projects?
Yes, my generators are designed to create authentic-sounding names suitable for professional writing. I put care into crafting names that feel natural and memorable for different genres and cultures. While I can't claim specific published works use my generators, many writers and creators find them helpful for their creative projects.
Can I use generated civic tech names for commercial projects like books or games?
Yes, you can use any names generated by my tools for commercial projects including novels, short stories, video games, tabletop RPGs, and other media. However, since these are randomly generated, I always recommend doing your due diligence to ensure the names aren't already trademarked or heavily associated with existing works in your industry.
Do I need to credit The Story Shack when using generated civic tech names?
No credit is required when using generated names in your projects. While I always appreciate a mention or link back to The Story Shack, it's not mandatory. The names become yours to use freely once generated, whether for personal or commercial purposes.
How often are new civic tech names added to the generators?
I regularly update my name databases with new entries and expanded collections. I continuously add new names based on user feedback, research, and emerging trends. Each generator contains thousands of unique combinations, ensuring fresh results every time you generate.
Are there premium features or additional generator options available?
All my name generators are completely free with no limits and no account required. For longer projects I also build dedicated apps that pair perfectly with the generators: Writer for distraction-free novel writing with full worldbuilding for characters, locations and lore, Pathways for branching story flowcharts, and Spark for daily creative writing exercises. Those apps need a free account; the random name generators stay open to everyone.

