List of fictional towns and villages
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by
expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
This is a list of fictional towns, villages and cities organized by each city's medium. This list should include only well-referenced, notable examples of fictional towns, cities, settlements and villages that are integral to a work of fiction and substantively depicted therein.
Comics
Name | Debut | Creator(s) | Publisher | Notes |
Gotham City | Batman #4 (Winter 1940) | | DC Comics | A fictional American city that is the home of Batman, and the principal setting for all Batman comics, films, and other adaptations. Generally portrayed as a dark, crime-ridden locale, writer/artist Frank Miller has described Gotham City as New York City at night. It was originally strongly inspired by Trenton, Ontario's history, location, atmosphere, and various architectural styles, and has since incorporated elements from New York City, Detroit, Pittsburgh, London and Chicago. Anton Furst's designs of Gotham for Tim Burton's Batman (1989) have been influential on subsequent portrayals: he set out to "make Gotham City the ugliest and bleakest metropolis imaginable."[1] |
Metropolis | Action Comics #16 (Sept 1939) | | DC Comics | A fictional American city that is the home of Superman, and along with Smallville, one of the principal settings for all Superman comics, films, and other adaptations. |
District X |
New X-Men #127 |
Grant Morrison, John Paul Leon |
Marvel Comics |
A ghetto like neighbourhood of New York City, where most of the inhabitants are Mutants, with the rise of Manhattan's mutant population coupled with racism among normal humans, led to mutants forming their own community in a ghetto established in or around Alphabet City, Manhattan;Middle East Side,Mutant Town are its other names. A series of explosions incinerated much of the neighborhood, with Arcade's force fields preventing fire fighters from entering the area until the entire district had been utterly annihilated.Now District X has been destroyed completely. |
Rajnagar |
|
|
Raj Comics |
A fictional Indian town where some of India's iconic superheroes like Super Commando Dhruva, Chandika resides. |
Smallville, Kansas | Superboy #2 (May 1949) | | DC Comics | A fictional town in Kansas that is the hometown of Superman, where he landed on earth as an infant and was raised under an ordinary human identity in a small, idyllic farming community. Comics and adapted media that portray Superman's origin typically show his growing up in Smallville (such as Superman: The Movie (1978)), and the adult Superman also returns to visit. Smallville debuted in comics as the setting for Superboy (originally the identity of Superman as a youth, later made into a separate character) but was first mentioned in The Adventures of Superman radio show. The television series Smallville broadcast from 2001 to 2011. |
Film
Television
Town Name |
Origin |
Network |
Notes |
Cabot Cove |
Murder, She Wrote |
CBS |
Cabot Cove, Maine, is the small, fictional fishing village in which Jessica Fletcher lives in the television series Murder, She Wrote. Many episodes of Murder, She Wrote used Cabot Cove as a location because the show's producers were contractually obliged to deliver five Cabot Cove episodes a year.[3] Despite the town's population of 3,560,[3] Cabot Cove became notable as a place where a large number of murders took place. The New York Times calculated that almost 2% of Cabot Cove's residents died during the show's run. More visitors to Cabot Cove died than residents.[3]
Cabot Cove is named after the town's founder, Winfred Cabot. Perhaps setting the stage for the town's reputation for murders, Cabot was killed in a murder-suicide situation with his wife Hepzibah. It has an architectural heritage of Victorian houses. Given the village's rich history, coastal location and close proximity to eastern U.S. cities, Cabot Cove was transformed from a small, sleepy fishing village to a tourist destination for the people coming from New York City. |
Hazzard County, Georgia |
The Dukes of Hazzard |
CBS |
'Hazzard County is a fictional county in Georgia that was the setting for the 1980s television series The Dukes of Hazzard and its 2005 film of the same name. |
Mayberry |
Andy Griffith Show |
CBS |
Mayberry is a fictional community in North Carolina that was the setting for two American television sitcoms, The Andy Griffith Show and Mayberry R.F.D. Mayberry was also the setting for a 1986 reunion television movie titled Return to Mayberry. It is said to be based on Andy Griffith's hometown, Mount Airy, North Carolina. |
Sunnydale, California |
Buffy the Vampire Slayer |
The WB |
Sunnydale, California is the fictional setting for the U.S. television drama Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Series creator Joss Whedon conceived the town as a representation of a generic California city, as well as a narrative parody of the all-too-serene towns typical in traditional horror movies.
Sunnydale is located on a "Hellmouth"; a portal "between this reality and the next", and convergence point of mystical energies.[4] |
Animated
Town Name |
Origin |
Network |
Notes |
Landmark City |
A.T.O.M. |
Jetix (2005–07), Disney XD (2007–15), Animax (2015–present), Discovery Family (2015–present) |
Landmark City is a fictional city, most likely located in the United States, in the television series, A.T.O.M. (2005). This metropolitan area seems to have quite a few futuristic elements to it, given the design of various buildings, skyscrapers, infrastructure, transportation, and other presented technology. Lee Industry Systems (or simply Lee Industries), a large and technologically advanced corporation, is portrayed to exert significant power and influence (in the Landmark City region, at least). Janus Lee, chairman and CEO of Lee Industries (also inventor and founder of the company), is a rich and successful businessman, as he holds various assets throughout the city (e.g.: banks, prisons, hospitals, malls, labs, factories, plazas, etc.) and over 6,000 separate patents on inventions. The enterprise's logo, LI, is also notably featured in the series.
Landmark City slightly resembles Hong Kong. |
City of Townsville |
The Powerpuff Girls |
Cartoon Network |
A fictional major city of The Powerpuff Girls. |
Bedrock |
The Flintstones |
ABC |
Bedrock is the fictional prehistoric city, which is home to the characters of the animated television series, The Flintstones (1960).[5] |
South Park, Colorado |
South Park |
CMDY |
A fictional small town of South Park, located within the real life South Park basin in the Rocky Mountains of central Colorado.[6] The town is also home to an assortment of frequent characters such as students, families, elementary school staff, and other various residents, who tend to regard South Park as a bland and quiet place to live.[7] |
Springfield |
The Simpsons |
FOX |
Springfield is the fictional town in which the American animated sitcom The Simpsons is set. A mid-sized town in an undetermined state of the United States, Springfield acts as a complete universe in which characters can explore the issues faced by modern society.[8] The geography of the town and its surroundings are flexible, changing to address whatever an episode’s plot calls for.[9] Springfield's location is impossible to determine; the show is deliberately evasive on the subject, providing contradictory clues and impossible information about an actual geographic location. |
Quahog, Rhode Island |
Family Guy |
Fox |
Quahog, Rhode Island is the setting for the U.S. animated television sitcom Family Guy. A popular bar in the town is The Drunken Clam. |
Literature
Town Name |
Author |
Origin |
Notes |
|
Castle Rock |
Stephen King |
various novels |
Castle Rock, Maine is part of Stephen King’s fictional Maine topography and provides the setting for a number of his novels, novellas, and short stories. Built similarly to the fictional towns of Jerusalem's Lot (featured in the novel 'Salem's Lot) and Derry (featured in the novels It, Insomnia, and Dreamcatcher), Castle Rock is a typical small New England town with many dark secrets. |
Cittàgazze |
Philip Pullman |
The Subtle Knife |
Cittàgazze (sometimes abbreviated to Ci'gazze), meaning "City of the Magpies" in Italian, is a fictional city within an unknown world (and parallel universe). |
Hogsmeade |
J.K. Rowling |
Harry Potter series |
Hogsmeade Village is the only settlement in Britain inhabited solely by magical beings, and is located to the northwest of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. It was founded by medieval wizard Hengist of Woodcroft.[10] Much of Hogsmeade's architecture reflects its medieval origin; the village is known for its leaning medieval houses. Hogsmeade primarily consists of a single thoroughfare, called High Street, on which most shops and other magical venues reside. |
Lake Wobegon |
Garrison Keillor |
A Prairie Home Companion |
Lake Wobegon is a fictional lake and town in Minnesota. It is the setting for Garrison Keillor's segment "The News from Lake Wobegon" from the radio program A Prairie Home Companion as well Kellior's books Lake Wobegon Days (1985) and Leaving Home (1987). It is said to be located in the fictional Mist County in Central Minnesota presumably near St. Cloud. The town is based on the small town life of various Minnesota lake communities, most notably Kellior's hometown of Anoka, Minnesota. |
Middlemarch |
George Eliot |
Middlemarch |
Middlemarch is a fictional town in 19th century England circa 1832. It is the setting for George Eliot's 1872 novel. A small town in New Zealand bears the same name, possibly because the wife of a 19th-century surveyor was reading the novel at the time settlements were being catalogued. |
Amber |
Roger Zelazny |
The Chronicles of Amber |
The Castle, City and State of Amber is a fictional place created by Roger Zelazny in a series of fantasy novels. |
Lankhmar |
Fritz Leiber |
Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser |
Lankhmar is a populous, labyrinthine city rife with corruption. It serves as the home of Leiber's two anti-heroes Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser. It also forms a Dungeons & Dragons campaign setting. |
Ankh-Morpork |
Terry Pratchett |
Discworld |
Pratchett describes Ankh-Morpork as on the far side of corrupt and polluted, and as subject to outbreaks of comedic violence and brouhaha on a fairly regular basis. Ankh-Morpork is also the mercantile capital of the Discworld. As the series proceeds, Ankh-Morpork is more and more portrayed as multi-cultural (which in this case means multi-species, with increasingly prominent populations of creatures such as dwarves, trolls, vampires, gnomes, bogeymen, zombies and werewolves) and struggling with modern real-world challenges. Even when it is under attack from a dragon, the vegetable carts still have to come in. In The Art of Discworld, Pratchett explains that the city is similar to Tallinn and central Prague, but adds that it has elements of 18th-century London, 19th-century Seattle and modern New York City. |
Video games
Name |
Debut |
Notes |
Kakariko Village |
Zelda |
Kakariko Village (カカリコ村, Kakariko-mura) is a fictional village of The Legend of Zelda Series that appears in A Link to the Past, Ocarina of Time, Four Swords Adventures and Twilight Princess. Kakariko is often portrayed as a prosperous small town. |
Los Santos |
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas |
Like its counterpart of Los Angeles, Los Santos comprises several diverse areas. The urban area of Los Santos holds a population comparable to Los Angeles. Los Santos features several interpretations of many of Los Angeles' districts, landmarks, and neighborhoods, including Compton (Ganton), Willowbrook (Willowfield), Watts (Jefferson), Inglewood (Idlewood), East Los Angeles (East Los Santos), MacArthur Park (Glen Park), Downtown Los Angeles (Downtown Los Santos), Beverly Hills (Rodeo), Mulholland Drive (Mulholland), Santa Monica (Santa Maria Beach), Venice Beach (Verona Beach), Hollywood (Vinewood) and its Hollywood Sign (Vinewood Sign).
Los Santos is also part of the setting for Grand Theft Auto V. The new rendition of the city is now much more detailed, larger, and looks more alive than ever before. The city can be divided into four big sections: North, East, West and South Los Santos, in which beneath the sections, the streets are divided into districts. There are two incorporated cities in Los Santos: Davis, Del Perro. |
Pallet Town |
Pokémon |
Pallet Town (マサラタウン, Masara Town) is a fictional town located in western region of Kanto in the Pokémon universe. It based on Machida, Tokyo, Satoshi Tajiri's hometown although its map location correlates better with some place in Shizuoka Prefecture. The town only has two entrances, north via Route 1 to Viridian City and Route 21 south accessible through water only. |
Vice City |
GTA Vice City |
Vice City, as depicted in Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, is set in 1986, a reference to 1980s Miami, Vice City is specifically indicated to be located within the state of Florida, while Vice City was suggested to exist alongside Miami in Grand Theft Auto III.
Vice City was also featured in the game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories. |
Mythology
"Walhalla" (1896) by Max Brückner.
Other
See also
References
- ↑ Anton Furst, Derek Meddings, Visualizing Gotham: The Production Design of Batman, 2005, Warner Home Video.
- ↑ StarWars.com Databank: Mos Eisley
- 1 2 3 Barron, James, 1996-04-14, Whodunit? That Under-40 Crowd, New York Times.
- ↑ Welcome to the Hellmouth (1.01) introduces the Hellmouth, which is referred to numerous times throughout the series. The entrance to the Hellmouth is seen under the school in The Zeppo, Doomed, Conversations with Dead People, and throughout the second half of season seven.
- ↑ Blake, Heidi (30 September 2010). "The Flintstones' 50th anniversary: 15 things you don't know". Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 2010-10-01.
- ↑ Griffiths, Eric (June 21, 2007). "Young offenders". New Statesman. Retrieved May 3, 2009.
- ↑ Heffernan, Virginia (April 28, 2004). "Critic's Notebook; What? Morals in 'South Park'?". The New York Times. Retrieved October 24, 2010.
- ↑ Turner, p. 55
- ↑ Turner, p. 30
- ↑ "HPL: Wizards, Witches and Beings: H". Retrieved 27 July 2008.
- ↑ Schick, Lawrence (1991). Heroic Worlds: A History and Guide to Role-Playing Games. Buffalo, New York: Prometheus Books. ISBN 0-87975-653-5.