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*[[Douglas Niles|Niles, Douglas]]. ''The Complete Book of Gnomes and Halflings''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1993.
*[[Douglas Niles|Niles, Douglas]]. ''The Complete Book of Gnomes and Halflings''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1993.
* [[Carl Sargent|Sargent, Carl]]. ''[[Ivid the Undying]]''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1995. Published online. [https://greyhawkonline.com/download/16370/?tmstv=1727302323 PDF by William Allman with maps].  Original RTF archived:[http://web.archive.org/web/20081218001449/http://www.wizards.com/default.asp?x=dnd/dnd/downloads Wizards.com]. WGR7 or WGRx
* [[Carl Sargent|Sargent, Carl]]. ''[[Ivid the Undying]]''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1995. Published online. [https://greyhawkonline.com/download/16370/?tmstv=1727302323 PDF by William Allman with maps].  Original RTF archived:[http://web.archive.org/web/20081218001449/http://www.wizards.com/default.asp?x=dnd/dnd/downloads Wizards.com]. WGR7 or WGRx
*[[Tweet, Jonathan]], [[Monte Cook]], and [[Skip Williams]]. ''Player's Handbook''. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2000.
*[[Jonathan Tweet|Tweet, Jonathan]], [[Monte Cook]], and [[Skip Williams]]. ''Player's Handbook''. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2000.
:———. ''Player's Handbook Core Rulebook I v.3.5''. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2003.
:———. ''Player's Handbook Core Rulebook I v.3.5''. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2003.
*[[Skip Williams|Williams, Skip]]. ''Monster Manual''. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2000.
*[[Skip Williams|Williams, Skip]]. ''Monster Manual''. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2000.

Latest revision as of 07:26, 20 April 2025


Greyhawk Creature
Halfling
A male halfling depicted in Monstrous Compendium, Vol. 1 (1989), art by Jim Holloway.
General information
Alignment:Neutral
Type:Humanoid
Subtype:Halfling
First appearance:Dungeons & Dragons Original Set (1974)

Halflings called hobniz in the Flan language, or hobbits in early editions, are a diminutive humanoid race friendly to humans, elves, dwarves, and gnomes.

Ecology

Halflings hunt when they need to, but prefer breads, vegetables, and fruits, with the occasional pheasant or suchlike on the side.

Environment

Halflings have no lands of their own, living instead in the lands claimed by other races. They can be encountered most frequently in the central and western Flanaess; they're a common sight throughout the Sheldomar Valley, in the Urnst States, and in the Ulek States. They favor stable nations with long histories of peace with their neighbors. They normally shun water and extremes in temperature, preferring the pastoral countryside. Halflings form tight-knit communities within dwarven and human cities, or they form self-reliant villages in secluded places.

There are perhaps 3,000 halflings within the Vesve Forest, and a few within the Silverwood and the Flinty Hills. They dwell within the Good Hills and the Hollow Highlands. The vast majority of the halflings in the Cairn Hills region hug the Nyr Dyv; the land there is poor, which is a major reason why other races were willing to let them have it. Their community of Elmshire (population 3,800) is there, with perhaps another thousand halflings scattered in smaller villages in the area.

Typical physical characteristics

A male halfling depicted in Concordance of Arcane Space (1989), art by Jim Holloway.
A halfling, as depicted in the 3.5 Monster Manual (2003).

Halflings look much like human children with slightly pointed ears. They stand about 3 feet tall and usually weigh between 30 and 35 pounds.[1][2][3], though this has varied by edition, though still usually (but not always)[4] between 30 and 45 pounds.[5] They have ruddy complexions, and their hair tends toward brown and sandy brown. Halfling men often wear long sideburns, but beards and mustaches are unheard of except amongst "stout" halflings[6] (see Subraces below). Their eyes are brown or hazel. They enjoy colorful dress, but their coats and trousers are likely to be a serviceable gray, tan, or brown. Customary cultural clothes for men includes knee-britches, tunics, and shirts, often with vests, and wear coats and high-collared shirts on formal occasions. For women, common dress includes bodice-covered shifts and long skirts when not adventuring. Both dress themselves in gnome style when at war.

Halflings live 150 on average.[1][2][5]

Alignment

Halflings are usually neutral in the third edition of the Dungeons & Dragons game, though in earlier editions they were listed as lawful and/or good. Much of the halfling pantheon remains lawful and good-aligned, indicating that those ideals are strong within their culture, even if they have trouble living up to them.

Society

While halflings met outside their own lands may often be thieves, there is little thievery, crime, or drunkenness in the halflings’ own realms. Within their own communities, halflings tend to be peaceful, hard-working, and orderly. Their villages usually contain as many burrow homes as surface cottages. Halflings are, however, clever and capable opportunists, finding room for themselves wherever they can, whether they live as innocuous farmers or as tricksy rogues.

Halflings have ample appetites for such things as well-cooked meals, fine drinks, good tobacco, and comfortable clothes. While they can be lured by the promise of wealth, they tend to spend what they gain rather than horde it as a dwarf will. Halflings are, however, famous collectors. Many collect teapots, books, or pressed flowers, while others prefer more exotic goods such as the skins of wild beasts, or even the beasts themselves.

Halflings are known for enchanting their foods and their use of herbal magic. Their spells tend to be protective or defensive in nature. Halflings take pleasure in simple crafts and nature. Their short fingers are very dextrous, allowing them to make objects of great beauty.

Cheerful and outgoing, halflings try to get along most other races, though they distrust goblins and suchlike and regard the Rhennee as evil unless proven otherwise, never trading with them. They are adept at fitting into the cities of elves, dwarves, humans, and gnomes.

Halfling communities always have an elected ruler, typically a mayor or sheriff. Family ties are strong, and communities are often insular.

Religion

The chief deity of halflings is Yondalla, who leads a pantheon including Arvoreen, Brandobaris, Cyrrollalee, Sheela Peryroyl, and Urogalan. Besides these major gods, halflings recognize a vast pantheon of small gods representing villages, forests, rivers, lakes, beloved ancestors, and so on, as well as the hero-goddess Charmalaine. Halflings also frequently worship Ehlonna and Ulaa. Obad-hai also frequently takes halfling form.

Language

Halflings have their own language, written using the same alphabet as the human Common tongue. The Halfling tongue is more aimed at practicality than beauty; it has a certain lyrical flow to it, but it is not as melodic as that of the elves. Most halfling words are short, only one or two syllables, and seemingly long words usually turn out to be compounds. Halfling has a lot of borrow-words in it, drawing from many other languages, and, as linguistic pack-rats, they add new words all the time. As a result, there are some almost absurdly specific words in the Halfling tongue - for example, there is a word for "little green leaf," and a completely separate one for "big red leaf." The halfling oral tradition is much stronger than their written one, so most halfling stories and histories are oral ones. Almost all halflings speak Common as well. Many also understand the languages of gnomes, goblins, and orcs.

Halflings use first names and surnames like the gnomes do, but they often use nicknames, pet names, abbreviated names, and other devices that other races often found irksome or pretentious.

Halfling subspecies

Typical appearances of some types of halflings. The Usual Suspects: Hobniz, by K. Nolen (2005). Image copyright; used with permission, Do Not Copy.
Two halflings speak with a human. Art by Jeff Dee.
Male and female lightfoot halflings, as depicted in the 3.5 Player's Handbook (2003).

Halflings in Dungeons & Dragons have been further divided into various subraces:

  • Hairfoot originated with Tolkein's hobbits (and were called that in early editions). Hairfoot halflings are the standard, "most numerous" subrace of halflings in the World of Greyhawk™.[7][8] "They live in underground burrows or small cottages in the grasslands or hills. They are lightly covered with hair over most of their bodies, especially the backs of their hands and the tops of their feet, and they rarely wear shoes."[7][8] Originally derived from Tolkien's Harfoots, they most clearly resembled Middle-earth's hobbits, being a good-natured race of homebodies with fur-covered feet. They were the "most common of halflings" in 2e and earlier editions,[9] but during 3e, the "primary group" of halflings were stated to be the "lightfoot" variety[10] (see below), though this was again the hairfeet in 5e.[11]
  • Stout halflings were based on Tolkien's Stoors. Shorter but broader than hairfoot halflings, stouts make good craftsmen. They have broad features and course hair. They can live 200 years or more. In 3e they were renamed deep halflings, though they are still called stouts in the Living Greyhawk Gazetteer and continue to called stouts in 5e.[7]
  • Tallfellow halflings were based on Tolkien's Fallohides. They are taller than hairfoot or lightfoot halflings, with lighter hair and skin tone, and prefer to build their homes in woodlands. Tallfellows live 180 years on average.
  • Lightfoot halflings are typically nomadic or semi-nomadic. They are described in the 3e Monster Manual as having "ruddy skin, straight black hair, and dark eyes."[3][12], while in Greyhawk-specific sources during the same edition, lightfoot halflings were described as "ruddy faced, with hair and eyes in various shades of brown."[10] They do not have hair-covered feet and they wear shoes or boots. They are more removed from Tolkien's halflings, being athletic and ambitious opportunists, although they retain their love of comfort and family. In 3e and 4e, they differed visually from the stereotypical depiction of halfings; rather than having the thicker proportions normally associated with halfings or hobbits, they were slender and more graceful in appearance.[12][13] Lightfoot halfings' appearance in fifth edition returned to being somewhat more customary, and they have a proportionally larger cranium and appear more typically stocky, though they still have small feet and wear foot-coverings.[5][14]

A race called Jerren is found in the 3e Book of Vile Darkness, described as brutal and chaotic halflings who acquired those traits by Vile magic during a war—though these have never been found in the World of Greyhawk™.

Likewise, Furchin, or polar halflings, are called the rarest of the subraces. They live in arctic regions and can grow facial hair.[15] However, though they are in PHBR9 Complete Book of Gnomes & Halfings, they have never been placed explicitly in the World of Greyhawk™.

  • Brownies are distant relatives of halflings, perhaps half halfling and half pixie (1977 Monster Manual, page 11).
  • Leprechauns are rumored to be a species of halfling with a strong strain of pixie blood (1977 Monster Manual, page 60).

History

The halfling race seems to have originated in the river valleys of the west-central Flanaess, spreading only slowly from their homeland. At the time of the Great Migrations, few were north of the Gamboge Forest or east of the Harp River. They developed friendly relationships with the Oeridians, however, and today they can be found throughout much of the Flanaess.

Between CY 583-584, the halflings of the Domain of Greyhawk region suffered a terrible blight. Nearly a quarter of the population of Elmshire died.

Creative origins

Originally, halflings were called "hobbits" in the first iterations of D&D.

Halflings are inspired by hobbits, creatures from J. R. R. Tolkien's The Hobbit (1934) and Lord of the Rings

The name "halfling" appears in the works of Tolkien as a synonym for hobbit:

" "We had not heard of hobbits, or halflings, for many a long year, and did not know that any yet dwelt in Middle-earth."
—Haldir, The Fellowship of the Ring"

The term "halfling" derives linguistically from the Scots word halflin or hauflin, pre-dating The Hobbit and Dungeons & Dragons. It meant an awkward rustic teenager who is neither man nor boy, and so half of both. Another word for halflin is hobbledehoy or hobby. Contrary to widely held belief, "halfling" does not appear in any of the works of Shakespeare[16], although it does appear in Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe, where it refers to a coin, not a person.

The name "hobbit" appeared in The Denham Tracts (1895)[17], where it is briefly mentioned in a list of spirits or creatures from the folklore of northern England. The hobbit as a fantasy race was defined by Tolkien's The Hobbit (1934), from which Gygax took inspiration.[18]

Folklore

Hanner Dyn, the Half-Man, is a character from British folklore. He was called half-man because he was a boy who could beat men at wrestling. As an adult, he could beat King Arthur at wrestling. Hanner Dyn means habit and the force of habit. [1]

A halfling warrior (OD&D Master Players' Guide. Art by Jeff Easley (1985).

Publishing history

The halfling's aptitude for stealth was not defined until Supplement I: Greyhawk (1975), which introduced the thief class. Halflings may reach unlimited level as a thief, and gain bonuses to all thief abilities, including opening locks, removing traps, pickpocketing, moving silently, hiding, and hearing noise.

In the original 1974 release of Dungeons & Dragons "White Box,", halflings were known as hobbits, referencing their inspiration in the works of J.R.R. Tolkien. AD&D's three halfling subraces, the hairfeet, stout and tallfellow, closely match Tolkien's three breeds of hobbit: the harfoot, stoor, and fallohide, as well as their propensity to be of mixed heritage. In Volume 1: Men & Magic, they are called halflings on pages 8 and 9, and hobbits on pages 6 and 9. In Volume 3: The Underworld & Wilderness Adventures, they are called hobbits on page 9.

A notoriously litigious movie-industry mogul (Saul Zaentz) bought the film, stage and merchandising rights (products such as "figurines, tableware, stationery items, clothing, and the like") of those works from United Artists in 1976 and licenses them through the former Tolkien Enterprises, now Middle-earth Enterprises.[19] United Artists retained distribution rights.[20] A common misonception is that the Tolkein Estate (the heirs of J. R. R. Tolkein) filed the suit, but it was Zaentz who held the rights. When he filed suit[21] over TSR's Battle of the Five Armies game (despite not owning the rights for games) in 1977 in the run-up to the release of the animated film The Lord of the Rings (1978),[22][23][24] hobbits were renamed to halflings from the game's sixth printing onward (1977).[25] Hobbits were likewise renamed in the fifth edition of Chainmail (1978).

Depending on when a manuscript was published and when second prints were issued, from 1975 to 1977 some books did or did not use "hobbit", or used hobbit and halfling interchangably. Prior to its 11th printing, in Supplement I: Greyhawk halflings are consistently called "hobbits". In Supplement II: Blackmoor (1975) they are almost always called "halflings," except in one reference to hobbits as "bite-sized." They are called hobbits in Supplement III: Eldritch Wizardry (1975) and always called halflings in Swords & Spells (1976). The words were still used interchangeably in the Dungeons & Dragons Game edited by Eric Holmes in 1977. They are exclusively called halflings in the AD&D 1e Monster Manual (1977) and in the Dungeons & Dragons Fantasy Adventure Game Basic Rulebook edited by Tom Moldvay (1981).


References

Notes

Citations

  1. a b Player's Handbook (1989), p.24.
  2. a b Player's Handbook (2000), p.20.
  3. a b Monster Manual (Oct 2000), p.116.
  4. Player's Handbook (2008), p.45.
  5. a b c Player's Handbook (2014), p.26.
  6. PHBR9 The Complete Book of Gnomes & Halflings (1993), p.69.
  7. a b c Mordenkainen's Tome of Foes (2018), p.105.
  8. a b Player's Guide (1998), p.38.
  9. PHBR9 The Complete Book of Gnomes & Halflings (1993), p.68.
  10. a b Living Greyhawk Gazetteer (2000), p.10.
  11. Mordenkainen's Tome of Foes (2018), p.105 "Halflings in the world of Greyhawk ... are lightly covered with hair over most of their bodies, especially on the backs of their hands and the tops of their feet, and they rarely wear shoes. ... the hairfeet, which are the most numerous; the tallfellows, which are the tallest and least athletic of the halflings, somewhat resembling elves; and the stouts, which are more akin to dwarves in temperament and stature than the other two."
  12. a b Monster Manual v3.5 (2003), p.149.
  13. Player's Handbook (2000), p.12, 19.
  14. Mordenkainen's Tome of Foes (2018), p.99, 101.
  15. PHBR9 The Complete Book of Gnomes & Halflings (1993), p.75-76.
  16. A search of the collective works of Shakespeare reveals no instances of the word "halfling". This claim was first added in a Wikipedia edit in September 2004, and was later repeated in The Evolution of Fantasy Role-Playing Games (2010), who cites "Bevington 1992", but this is almost certainly a print copy of the Complete Works of Shakespeare, which the author is unlikely to have checked in its entirety.
  17. The Denham Tracts (1895).
  18. "Hobbit is another folkword borrowed from legends, but Tolkien personified and developed these diminutive stalwarts extensively. They, and the name, are virtually unique to his works, and the halflings of both game systems draw substantial inspiration from them." - The Influence of J. R. R. Tolkien on the D&D and AD&D Games, Dragon #95 (1985), p.12-13
  19. Dotinga, William. Tolkiens Aghast at Warner Bros.' Exploitation. Courthouse web. Retrieved on November 6, 2017.
  20. Quinn, Karl. Lord of the Rings a chronicle of legal disputes. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved on November 6, 2017.
  21. "One morning a marshal delivered a summons to me as an officer of TSR. It was from the Saul Zaents division of ELan Merchandising, the sum named was $500,000, and the filing claimed proprietorial rights to the above names as well as to dwarf, elf, goblin, orc, and some others too. It also demanded a cease and desist on the publication of the Battle of Five Armies game." - Gary Gygax, Dragonsfoot forums, 2005.
  22. (2015) Dangerous Games: What the Moral Panic Over Role-Playing Games Says about Play, Religion, and Imagined Worlds, Univ of California Press, p. 47 ISBN: 9780520284913.
  23. (2014) Of Dice and Men: The Story of Dungeons & Dragons and The People Who Play It, Simon and Schuster, pp. 140–141 ISBN: 9781451640519.
  24. "The Subcreation of J. R. R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth and How It Became Transmedial Culture" in (8 December 2016) Revisiting Imaginary Worlds A Subcreation Studies Anthology, pp. 69–82: 75 DOI: 10.4324/9781315673363. ISBN: 9781315673363.
  25. "References to Hobbits and Ents have been changed to Halflings and Treants (see page 9 of Men & Magic), due to copyright conflicts with the Tolkien estate (with the exception of a single leftover reference on pg 6 to Hobbits!). Furthermore, many other infringements on Tolkien's literary license were excised or changed; notably, references to Balrogs, Nazgul, and even several mentions of Tolkien himself" - Original D&D Set, The Acaceum.

Bibliography

This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).
  • Arneson, Dave. Blackmoor. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR Games, 1975.
  • Gygax, Gary. Swords & Spells. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR Games, 1976.
———. Monster Manual. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1977.
———. Player's Handbook. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1978.
———. World of Greyhawk Fantasy Game Setting. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1983.
  • Gygax, Gary, and Dave Arneson. Dungeons & Dragons. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1974.
———. Dungeons & Dragons Basic Set. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1977.
———. Dungeons & Dragons Basic Set. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1981.
———. Dungeons & Dragons Set 1: Basic Rules. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1983.
———. The Adventure Begins. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 1998.
———. "The Halfling Point of View." Dragon #59. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1982.
———. Player's Handbook Core Rulebook I v.3.5. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2003.
  • Williams, Skip. Monster Manual. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2000.
———. Races of the Wild. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2005.

Encyclopedia Greyhawkania Index

The Encyclopedia Greyhawkania Index (EGI) is based on previous work of Jason Zavoda through '08, continued by numerous other fans. The EGI article has a list of sources, product names, abbreviations, and a link to the full, downloadable index.

Topic Type Description Product Page/Card/Image

Alphon, the halfling Non-player character Halfling, [3e Exp3], Return to the Temple of Elemental Evil, D&D 3.0e 15
Arcane Resistance of Dwarves and Halflings By Serten Item Book, Dragon magazine #082 58
Arcane Resistance of Dwarves and Halflings By Serten Item Book, Encyclopedia Magica - Volume III 1140
Diggdeep (Halfling) People Group Clan, Night Arrant 167
Diggerly (Halfling) People Group Clan, Night Arrant 167
Diggson (Halfling) People Group Clan, Night Arrant 167
Dugwall (Halfling) People Group Clan, Night Arrant 167
Halfling Blight Calendar From the Ashes: Campaign Book 13
Halfling language Verbal communication Language, Ghosts of Saltmarsh, D&D 5e 9
Halfling Lore (General) Rules Feat/Proficiency/Skill, Dragon magazine #315 53
Halfling Whistler Rules Kit, PHBR7 - The Complete Bard's Handbook 61-63
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, CGR1 The Complete Spacefarer's Handbook 7, 10, 13, 15, 34, 36, 37, 46, 49, 61, 83, 85, 89, 91
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Dungeon magazine #148 28, 29, 43, 45
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Greyhawk Adventures 116
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Ghosts of Saltmarsh, D&D 5e 11, 18, 20, 39, 65, 144, 210
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, L1 The Secret of Bone Hill 2
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Living Greyhawk, Living Onnwal Gazetteer, D&D 3.5e 8, 22, 23, 41, 42, 46, 49, 70, 87, 90, 106
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monster Manual 1, AD&D 1e 50, 51
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monster Manual 1, D&D 3.5e (Premium Edition) 149, 150
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monster Manual 1, D&D 4e (Deluxe Edition) 152, 153
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Manual of the Planes, AD&D 1e 113
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Official AD&D Coloring Album 2, 12, 14, 18
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Oerth Journal #06 20,34
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Oerth Journal #07 11
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Oerth Journal #12 19
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Oerth Journal #21 7
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Oerth Journal #24 16
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Oerth Journal #30 9
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Oerth Journal #31 7
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Escape from Scant, RPGA 4
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, To Catch A Traitor, RPGA 12
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Rashtai's Brother, RPGA 4
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, PHBR9 - The Complete Book of Gnomes and Halflings 59-125
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Saltmarsh Encounters, D&D 5e 5
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, Vortext #08, Spring 1993 #08 19
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, War Captain's Companion Boxed Set: Book 1 63
Halfling {Hobniz} Monster Native of: Material Plane, World of Greyhawk boxed set (1983) 9, 12, 32, 33, 40
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, Dragon magazine #315 53, 54
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #08
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #09
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #10
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #11
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #12
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #14
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, GDQ1-7 Queen of the Spiders 16, 17
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, AD&D Monster Cards, Set 4 Not Numbered
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, MC1 - Monstrous Compendium Volume 1 Insert (Halfling)
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monster Manual 1, AD&D 1e 50
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monstrous Manual, AD&D 2e 183
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monstrous Manual, AD&D 2e (Premium Edition) 183
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, PHBR9 - The Complete Book of Gnomes and Halflings 68-69
Halfling, Hairfoot (Lightfoot) Monster Native of: Material Plane, World of Greyhawk boxed set (1983) 8, 9, 10, 11, 12
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, Dragon magazine #315 53, 54
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #08
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #09
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #10
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #11
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #12
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #14
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, GDQ1-7 Queen of the Spiders 16, 17
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, MC1 - Monstrous Compendium Volume 1 Insert (Halfling)
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monster Manual 1, AD&D 1e 50
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monstrous Manual, AD&D 2e 183
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monstrous Manual, AD&D 2e (Premium Edition) 183
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monster Manual 1, D&D 4e (Deluxe Edition) 152
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, PHBR9 - The Complete Book of Gnomes and Halflings 68, 69-70
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, SJR6 Greyspace 78
Halfling, Stout Monster Native of: Material Plane, World of Greyhawk boxed set (1983) 8, 9, 10, 11
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, Dragon magazine #315 53
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #08
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #09
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #10
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #11
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #12
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, From the Ashes: References Card #14
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, GDQ1-7 Queen of the Spiders 16, 17
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, MC1 - Monstrous Compendium Volume 1 Insert (Halfling)
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monster Manual 1, AD&D 1e 50, 51
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monstrous Manual, AD&D 2e 183
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monstrous Manual, AD&D 2e (Premium Edition) 183
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, Monster Manual 1, D&D 3.5e (Premium Edition) 149, 150
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, PHBR9 - The Complete Book of Gnomes and Halflings 68, 70-71
Halfling, Tallfellow Monster Native of: Material Plane, World of Greyhawk boxed set (1983) 8, 9, 10, 11, 12
Halflings Inc. People Group Organization/Society, SJR6 Greyspace 41, 42, 43, 47, 82
Hoetoe Family (Halfling) People Group Clan, A1-4 Scourge of the Slave Lords 13
Horse, Halfling Riding Pony Monster Reference SEE Pennig (Halfling Pony)
Horse, Halfling War Pony Monster Reference SEE Pennig (Halfling Pony)
Pennig (Halfling Pony) Monster Dragon magazine #269 68, 72
Potion of Halfling Control Item Dungeon Masters Guide 1st Edition 126
Potion of Halfling Control Item Dungeon Masters Guide, AD&D 1e (Premium Edition) 126
Potion of Halfling Control Item Encyclopedia Magica - Volume III 872