I mean Tiefling got obliterated as a bloc. It was only by the efforts of a few that Variant lasted as long as it did.
I frankly sort of understand that one though. Tieflings had
one hundred points on the board. 30 more points than the next-highest option (elves), and more than 150% of most of the "large" options (humans, dragonborn, halflings, etc.) That's a legitimate reason to be like "eeeeehhh, you need to be brought down a peg there friend." It just kept going, as this sort of thing is wont to do, sadly.
Dragonborn certainly get less hate than the furry types.
They're sort of in a liminal space. They're
like furries, because they're "animal + person," but the type of animal they are is a sapient being and "half-dragon" has been part of the collective D&D milieu for ages, so they can't just be kicked to the curb either. Conversely, actual "furry" races tend to be somewhat more banal. I'm convinced about half the hate dragonborn get is exclusively because people hear "it's a dragon that's also a person" and make the
emotional connection "oh so now you just get ALL THE POWERS OF A DRAGON? all the IMPORTANCE of a dragon? No, screw you, you're not
allowed to claim that at level 1." Which is why they're such a lightning rod. The fans who love them
adore them, and the anti-fans who oppose them (at least seem to)
despise them.