Orc or Hobgoblin?

diaglo

Adventurer
is this a d02 edition and newer question?


hobgoblins are more powerful than orcs in OD&D and 1edADnD. that extra +1 moves them up a whole category with chances to hit. they are better armed. better disciplined as a group. better tactics in mass combat when playing Chainmail, etc...
 

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GreenTengu

Adventurer
is this a d02 edition and newer question?


hobgoblins are more powerful than orcs in OD&D and 1edADnD. that extra +1 moves them up a whole category with chances to hit. they are better armed. better disciplined as a group. better tactics in mass combat when playing Chainmail, etc...

Yep. You missed the point, I think.

When you see one, do you think to yourself "hmmm... does that thing have a +1 hit point?" in order to determine what it is.
If you gain an Orcish follower do you say to him, "hold up! I got some extra gold. Let's get you fitted for some chainmail armor and a better weapon so you can become a hobgoblin."?

I don't see many races that are separated solely by personality and equipment. You don't say "The difference between a halfling and a dwarf is that a dwarf wears better equipment and is lawful and more organized." So you don't need to take a look at a group of short people coming and say "hmmm.. how organized do they seem?"

And particularly when you talk about PCs and NPCs, there is every reason to think that their class and background are going to make much more impact on what equipment they are using and how many hit points they have. That's why I provided all the example pictures-- because I want to find an answer based on appearance, and to be fair you can see what equipment they have in the pictures so that can even be part of it.

And of the people who have answered, only about 4 so far, there has been consensus on only a few... and some of those are the opposite of what the book claimed they were.

Chainmail was played with models, right? So even then they needed to be clearly differentiated.
 

N'raac

First Post
If you're looking for simple appearance, then I suggest the answer is that it has varied with edition, and can vary between game worlds and campaigns. Hobgoblins are "goblinoid", but "goblinoid" appearance varies a lot between, say, 1e, 4e, Pathfinder (hmmm...did we lose Hobgoblins in Pathfinder? oh, they completely lack facial hair and even females are often bald) and Order of the Stick.

But it hardly seems unreasonable we could see Hobgoblins who resemble Orcs and Orcs who have a resemblance to Hobgoblins. They likely have some characteristics in common as a race, but most races also see considerable variance in appearance.
 

Voadam

Legend
If you want to know from physical appearances if you are dealing with a hobgoblin or orc this may help:

HOBGOBLINS

"have dark orange or red-orange skin, and hair ranging from dark red-brown to dark gray. Yellow or dark brown eyes peer out beneath their beetling brows, and their wide mouths sport sharp and yellowed teeth. A male hobgoblin might have a large blue or red nose, which symbolizes virility and power among goblinkin."

ORCS

"have stooped postures, low foreheads, and piggish faces with prominent lower canines that resemble tusks."

These descriptions come directly from the source.

Which source?

Moldvay Basic:

Hobgoblins are bigger and meaner relatives of goblins.

Goblins are a small incredibly ugly human-like race. Their skin is a pale earthy color, such as chalky tan or livid gray. Their eyes are red, and glow when there is little light, somewhat like rat's eyes.

Orcs are ugly human-like creatures who look like a combination of animal and man.

1e AD&D Monster Manual:

The hairy hides of hobgoblins range from dark reddish-brown to gray black. Their faces are bright red-orange to red. Large males will have blue-red noses. Eyes are either yellowish or dark brown. Teeth are yellowed white to dirty yellow.

Orcs appear particularly disgusting because their coloration - brown or brownish green with a bluish sheen - highlights their pinkish snouts and ears. Their bristly hair is dark brown or black, sometimes with tan patches.

2e:

The typical hobgoblin is a burly humanoid standing 6½’ tall. Their hairy hides range from dark reddish-brown to dark gray. Their faces show dark red or red-orange skin. Large males have blue or red noses. Hobgoblin eyes are either yellowish or dark brown while their teeth are yellow.

Orcs vary widely in appearance, as they frequently crossbreed with other species. In general, they resemble primitive humans with grey-green skin covered with coarse hair. Orcs have a slightly stooped posture, a low jutting forehead, and a snout instead of a nose, though comparisons between this facial feature and those of pigs are exaggerated and perhaps unfair. Orcs have well-developed canine teeth for eating meat and short pointed ears that resemble those of a wolf. Orcish snouts and ears have a slightly pink tinge. Their eyes are human, with a reddish tint that sometimes makes them appear to glow red when they reflect dim light sources in near darkness. This is actually part of their optical system, a pigment which gives them infravision. Male orcs are about 5½ to 6 feet tall. Females average 6 inches shorter than males.

3e was pictures only, hobgoblins have yellow skin and orcs are green skinned.

3.5 MM says:

Hobgoblins’ hair color ranges from dark reddish-brown to dark gray. They have dark orange or red-orange skin. Large males have blue or red noses. Hobgoblins’ eyes are yellowish or dark brown, while their teeth are yellow.

An orc’s hair usually is black. It has lupine ears and reddish eyes. . . . An adult male orc is a little over 6 feet tall and weighs about 210 pounds. Females are slightly smaller.

In the 4e MM:

A member of the goblin species has skin of yellow, orange, or red, often shading to brown. Its eyes have the same color variance; its hair is always dark.Big, pointed ears stick out from the sides of the head, and prominent sharp teeth sometimes jut from the mouth. Males have coarse body hair and might grow facial hair.

[orcs only get pictures, black/gray skinned]

In the 4e Monster Vault:

[L]arge and pointed ears, a prominent jaw filled with sharp teeth, a small nose, and dark hair. Their skin might be any shade of green, yellow, or orange, with . . . hobgoblins [tending] to orange that can be nearly red.

[orcs again get only pictures

In the 5e MM:

Hobgoblins have dark orange or red-orange skin, and hair ranging from dark red-brown to dark gray. Yellow or dark brown eyes peer out beneath their beetling brows, and their wide mouths sport sharp and yellowed teeth. A male hobgoblin might have a large blue or red nose, which symbolizes virility and power among goblinkin.

Orcs are savage raiders and pillagers with stooped postures, low foreheads, and piggish faces with prominent lower canines that resemble tusks.

In the 5e Basic Rules:
Hobgoblins are large goblinoids with dark orange or red-orange skin.

Orcs are savage humanoids with stooped postures, piggish faces, and prominent teeth that resemble tusks.

In pathfinder:

[hobgoblin]Standing as tall as a human, this muscular, gray-skinned creature peers about with tiny, observant eyes. . . . A hobgoblin stands 5 feet tall and weighs 160 pounds.

[orc]This savage creature looks like a bestial version of a savage human, with green-gray skin and greasy black hair. . . . An adult male orc is roughly 6 feet tall and 210 pounds.
 


steeldragons

Steeliest of the dragons
Epic
The difference should be obvious.

Hobgoblins are orange.

Orcs are green.

Should be more obvious than that!

Orcs have great big piggish snouts [Don't give a crap how many "noble savage"-pug-nosed-BS orcs WotC kicks out].

Hobgoblins do not.
 



glass

(he, him)
In my campaign (my homebrew world of Pelhorin):

Both have the same range of skin colours, although green is the most common colour for orcs and very rare for hobgoblins, whereas orange or reddish skin is common for hobgoblins but very rare for orcs. Grey or olive skin is reasonably common but not predominant for both. Hair is usually black if they have any, although hobgoblins are more likely to have hair.

Orcs might have slightly-more-prominent teeth that are suggestive of tusks, or they might have full-on tusks. Hobgoblins have nothing of the sort.

Aside from that, orcs tend to be bulkier than hobgoblins at the same height.

(All sapient species in my homebrew world that have more than a small localised population have a wide variety of appearances, which necesarily means some overlap).

_
glass.
 
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GreyLord

Legend
My take is that it depends on the Campaign being run (in which case the real difference is the HP and the looks), but in general I find that it is...

1. Orcs are more like Cattle (at least initially, NOT the racial identifiers some try to use in this thread, though perhaps it is true in regards to 3e to 5e. The connection to derogatory racial ideas in 3e and 5e are very problematic, but that's not the initial idea of Orcs) or demonspawn (from the ideas of being either bred or spawned from evil from the Tolkien LotR trilogy, which is where I feel the Orc monster ideas originally came from).

Orcs appear like rabbits, and band together like many other monsters or creatures into tribes and groups. However, because they are more like Cattle or herd animals, they are very easy for Villains to take control of and use as their minions. Orcs are intially rather chaotic in nature, and tend to do things that many others would find vile (or evil), but are easily sway-able and thus many Villains try to get them for armies as fodder.

Having them come at you is like a stampede of cattle (which is EXTREMELY dangerous if you've ever been in that situation), or the untamed bull in the field (Bulls can also be VERY dangerous, and very aggressive) on a more individual arena.

2. Hobgoblins are more like Army Ants. Very militant in many ways, but also very driven to do their basic thing. Unfortunately, that thing involves conquest many times. They too can be utilized by others, but it is normally more of a top down thing where the villain controls the leaders rather than like the Shepard or cowboy controlling the herd/flock.

As an army they can be a persistent force of nature, consuming everything in their path.

3. In Pathfinder 1e Orcs vary greatly between each other. In general, the differences as put in the Bestiary state

the primary difference between orcs and the civilized humanoids is their attitude. As a culture, orcs are violent and aggressive, with the strongest ruling the rest through fear and brutality.

Meanwhile Hobgoblins are

...militaristic and fecund, a combination that makes them quite dangerous in some regions....

....Of all the goblinoid races, the hobgoblin is by far the most civilized
I think this actually reflects in many ways the more traditional ways of looking at Orcs and Hobgoblins from the past than more recent ideas about them.
 
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