Off-topic:
Current Russian naming scheme (that's on screenshot) looks rather funny for native Russian:
1) A lot of first names in diminutive forms (Pasha, Fedya, Jasha), some of them double diminutive (Boryenka, Stepka), and that's for the culture, that is nearly never using diminutives in official context, even to convey a pejorative sense - and that's the only sense in which diminutive forms are applicable in Russian aside of friendly/family context; it was really a norm up to XVIII century to use diminutives as a rank denotation (that is: a monarch using diminutives when referring to any of their subject; a nobleman - to a serf, etc.), yet it's a completely dead ancient norm.
2) Some surnames among/instead of given names (Petrov, Dmitreeva).
3) Strictly-feminitive surnames paired with strictly-male given names (the only way to approximate a Russian norms in Aurora naming scheme is to use male surname form only).
4) Non-Russian given names that are not and was not in use as popular foreign names in Russia (Marko, Derzhena).
5) Some orthographic mistakes (Shashenka instead of Sashenka, though it's intimate double diminutive inacceptible in official context too).
I'll edit and upload smth like "Russian, modern edition" naming scheme if you need it.