Click the green flag, then one of the buttons. They will give you either a random Latin name, or one from the books, or one I came up with. I decided to do this because I do Latin in school, and I was revising for a test when I thought it might be fun to try translating some of the names of the unicorns. A few days later, I'd translated almost all the names and I was working on it as a Scratch project. I used a combination of a Latin dictionary, the Cambridge Latin Course, Google Translate and my own knowledge to do the translations. Google Translate will not always agree with me. If you try to run these back through Google Translate, you will not get the exact names. For example, I translated 'Silver Blade' as 'Lamina Argentea'. When I ran it through Google Translate, I got 'Silver Plate'. It turned out that 'lamina' just means 'thin piece of metal'. Note: For the random names, most of them will be correct, but the ones with adjectives will not necessarily agree with the noun correctly, as I made them to agree with the original name. For example, the 'eternal' in 'Eternal Hoarfrost' agrees with 'hoarfrost'. If the program then generated the random name 'Eternal Inferno', they would not agree. Unfortunately, this was unavoidable.
Idea and code: mine Names: from books (thanks to @gadgeteers for helping find them all) Elemental symbol art: online Unicorn art: Scratch Concept: 'Skandar and the Unicorn Thief' series by A.F. Steadman Translations: Latin dictionary/Cambridge Latin Course/Google Translate