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[[File:Hordling MC8.jpg|thumb|The motliest of motley crews.]] '''Hordlings''' (also spelled '''Hordelings''') are a species of anarchic lesser [[fiend]]s from the [[multiverse]] of [[Dungeons & Dragons]]. These small-to-large, highly mutable fiends are native to [[Hades]] in the [[Great Wheel]], and to the [[Abyss]] in the [[World Axis]]. Both versions are the lowliest form of fiend, but they have certain unique traits. ==Great Wheel Hordlings== In the [[Great Wheel]], hordlings are what happens when larvae - the [[petitioner]] form of evil souls - are allowed to fester for too long, resulting in each wicked soul being reborn as a uniquely deformed [[fiend]]. As their name implies, these ragtag fiendlings gather in huge hordes, roaming aimlessly across [[Hades]] and the other [[Lower Planes]] and picking fights with anything they encounter. Some believe that they are the ultimately foundational forms of all fiendish races and that if left alone long enough, a hordling might grow up into a proper fiend, but this is basically nonsense. The first two editions had the DM roll to generate the traits her/himself. The 2e entry consists of '''twelve''' tables just to determine combat abilities, and then another ''seven'' for aesthetic traits. Just like the Evil Horde from those mid-1980s He-Man toys!! An ultra-mutable fiendish mook may sound like fun on paper, but when you had to do the rolling ''by hand'', or turn on your Commodore 64 and write a lot of BASIC code to do it (NOT THAT ANY OF US HERE REMEMBER ANY OF THAT) - it became a lot less fun. Add in that hordlings are supposed to come in huge hordes and... yeah, they grew tiresome to generate, pretty damn quickly. Not as bad as it used to be, now with so many dice rolling programs on the web along with greater ease of learning to code. ...Or you could opt to just throw some parts together in SPORE and use that as a basis. See for yourself: http://www.mojobob.com/roleplay/monstrousmanual/h/hordling.php Hordlings' first entry, in 1e [[Monster Manual]] II, had that they may be called ''en masse'' by use of the Bringer Of Doom. The Suel used that in the Invoked Devastation, upon their rivals the Bakluni. Most of that portion of Oerik is still a desert. (Don't worry, [[Rain_of_Colorless_Fire|the Bakluni got their own back]].) They then received an update to 2e in the [[Outer Planes]] Appendix for the Monstrous Compendium, and were subsequently reprinted in the [[Planescape]] MCA. They made the jump to 3rd edition in issue #124 of [[Dungeon Magazine]], which tried to make their mutability less imposing by making it mostly aesthetics, and dividing them up into several distinct types; the ''dread gnasher'', the ''skullreaver'', the ''spittlemaw'', the ''vulturewretch'', and the ''advanced hordling''. ==World Axis Hordelings== [[File:Hordling 4e.jpg|left|300px]] In the [[World Axis]], hordelings embody the unholy fecundity of the [[Abyss]]; they are literally scraps of elemental corruption and chunks of demon flesh born from the seething tides of profane energy emanating from that [[plane]]. When demons slaughter each other in battle, the corpses become the seed of new generations; the raw elemental substances of demonic carcasses is impregnated with the essence of pure evil that permeates the Abyss, causing new tiny fiendlings to rise up and carry on with the circle of birth, pain and death that keeps the Abyss alive. Hordelings do have some overlap with manes, in that they are the very least form of [[demon]] in the World Axis, generated spontaneously from the Abyss and potentially growing and evolving into stronger demons - either morphing into an established breed, or potentially becoming their own breed. However, most hordelings are typically lobbed across battlefields, crushed underfoot, consumed or slaughtered willy-nilly in demon games before they get much of a chance to experience living. The 4e hordeling was detailed in the [[splatbook]] "The Book of Vile Darkness", where it came in the form of the Hordeling Mob (level 11 Elite Brute Swarm) and the Hordeling Breakaway (level 11 Minion Brute). An article in issue #197 of [[Dungeon Magazine]], "Creature Incarnations: Hordelings" restored the idea of the Greater Hordeling, an exceptional or long-lived hordeling that is on the verge of maturing into a "real" demon. ==Gallery== <gallery> Hordling 1e.png Hordling 3e.jpg Hordling 4e 2.png </gallery> {{D&D-Outsiders}}
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