Queen Angella appears in She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, portrayed in the first season as an overprotective mother due to feeling responsible for leading the attack against the Horde that supposedly got her husband Micah killed and their alliance dissolved as a result.
He-Man possesses superhuman strength and is capable of performing incredible feats, such as lifting heavy objects such as boulders and buildings, breaking solid rock with his fists, as well as having the advantage over just about any opponent.
While on Etheria, He-Man discovers that he has a long lost twin sister, Princess Adora, who was abducted from Eternia as an infant by the evil warlock/warlord Hordak and his then apprentice Skeletor.
In the original animated series, King Randor is chiefly shown wearing his crown and royal robes, presiding over dinners, and shaking his head over Adam's supposed laziness and Orko's apparent ineptitude.
In the episode "Prince Adam No More," he demonstrates battle abilities when he helps He-Man fight off Skeletor's flying robots as they escape from Snake Mountain, mentioning his "strong left hook" from his warrior years.
In the He-Man and She-Ra The Secret of the Sword movie, he threatens to tear Snake Mountain to the ground in order to rescue Princess Adora after Skeletor and Hordak abduct her a second time.
When Spinnerella is told that Netossa has been captured by The Rebellion, she aids The Horde in gaining entry into The Whispering Woods by using her own ability to spin at rapid speeds to disable the trees' power.
In the 2018 series, Razz is re-imagined as a somewhat-senile old woman in the Whispering Woods with a connection to the previous She-Ra Mara, who seems to experience time non-linearly, and has a Russian accent.
In the 2018 series, Double Trouble is portrayed as a non-binary chameleon-like shape-shifter who loves causing chaos and is a morally ambiguous sociopath with a theatric flair that plays in their disguises and analyzing people.
Double Trouble later changes sides when Glimmer reveals the Heart of Etheria would give the Rebellion an advantage, sabotaging Catra's plans before leaving her psychological broken and defeated.
[17] He serves the Great Rebellion as a firefighter, his main power being to spray jets of water, stored in a special pack on his back, from his trunk, which he refills periodically from rivers and lakes.
The vain feline Force Captain has no regard or concern for even her fellow members of the Evil Horde, although Entrapta seemed to come as close to being a friend of Catra's as anyone could get.
Catra is voiced by Melendy Britt in the 1980s series and by AJ Michalka in She-Ra and the Princesses of Power A Horde scientist who specialises in devising traps, Entrapta has two long braids of prehensile hair that can ensnare her enemies.
[23] But when assumed to have died during a rescue mission in the Fright Zone, Entrapta ends up being captured and convinced by Catra to defect to the Horde with the promise of giving her access to their advanced technology.
Though she succumbs to the temptation while providing the Horde with the means to search for First One technology, she essentially rationalizes herself as being neutral in her abstract pursuits of learning the secrets of Etheria's ancient past.
Entrapta learned the portal device could destroy Etheria and refused to complete it, resulting in her exile to Beast Island by Catra covering up her discovery and making her appear as a traitor.
An origin story in a later issue explains that he comes from the jungle world of Jungulia "on the outer edge of the spiral arm of the N24 galaxy" and is a member of a race of man-beast creatures.
When detected with the weapons by Horde Prime's sata-spies, they mistook him for an evil warrior and reported him to Hordak, who beamed him on board his ship, erasing all memories of Jungulia from his mind so he would willingly serve him.
At times it even seems as though he may be more human than animal, particularly in the early episode "Beast Island" in which he is competent enough to operate a computer console and command a series of Destructotanks.
Grizzlor also features in animated form in the updated Masters of the Universe cartoon series, produced in 2002 by Mike Young Productions, to promote the relaunched toy line.
Coming the Filmation, minicomic, and UK comics canons, the Masters of the Universe Classics mythos established that Grizzlor lived peacefully as Gur'rull Gu'rrooowarrrk on the planet Jungulia until the Horde Empire abducted and brainwashed him into becoming a ferocious warrior.
In the Masters of the Universe comics published in the United Kingdom by London Edition Magazines, Horde Prime appears as a regular-sized bearded humanoid with antennae which protrude through his helmet.
Horde Prime appears as the main antagonist in the fifth and final season of She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, as a cybernetic humanoid version of himself with extra eyes transplanted from his clones, who serve as both his personal army and as extensions of himself.
A different version of the character called Lonnie (voiced by Dana Davis) debuted in the 2018 She-Ra and Princesses of Power series as a Horde cadet alongside Adora, Catra, Rogelio and Kyle.
In the 2018 series, while having a more exaggerated figure with a more simple and naïve personality, Scorpia is revealed to be a Princess whose family were the original rulers of the Fright Zone before swearing loyalty to the Horde and giving Hordak the Black Garnet Runestone.
In season four, guilty over her role in Entrapta's exile, Scorpia leaves the Horde and ends up joining the Rebellion while gaining electricity-based powers from connecting to the Black Garnet.
She commands an array of Black Magicks, vast encyclopedic knowledge of dark Etherian mystical lore and access to ancient artifacts accumulated by years of Horde dominion over the galaxy.
She is portrayed to have been originally a disgraced Mystacorian mage named Light Spinner, who left her kingdom long ago and resurfaced as Hordak's second in command with access to the Black Garnet runestone which she learned to draw power from.
Newly created for the Masters of the Universe Classics toyline, Cy-Chop is a cyborg bounty hunter with scissor-like hands, blue furry limbs, and a transparent torso.
He was based on concept art for a Mattel action figure called Dial-A-Feature, which would have had a similar gimmick as Man-E-Faces, but with the face divided horizontally into sections, allowing his eyes, nose, and mouth dials to be rotated individually.