Worse treaty of Trianon?

I've seen plenty of threads about Trianon being lighter, reversed or removed, but never one about it being worse for Hungary.

What if the Treaty of trianon completely partioned Hungary, giving all former Hungarian lands to Czechoslovakia, Romania, Yugoslavia and maybe Austria? How could these countries even be convinced to take in so many angry Hungarians? Where would the borders likely be drawn? And how would the lack of a hungarian state affect the interwar period and ww2?
 
I've seen plenty of threads about Trianon being lighter, reversed or removed, but never one about it being worse for Hungary.

What if the Treaty of trianon completely partioned Hungary, giving all former Hungarian lands to Czechoslovakia, Romania, Yugoslavia and maybe Austria? How could these countries even be convinced to take in so many angry Hungarians? Where would the borders likely be drawn? And how would the lack of a hungarian state affect the interwar period and ww2?
Read up on the last of the Habsburg emperors and Horthy and you might find some fun stuff. Apparently when the Habsburg came in abruptly some say the Czecks would use it as an excuse to invade and annex more land. Not that hat I really see anyone but Germans wanting more land, as everyone gained so much and, outside of Germans, post-Trianon Hungary was mostly Magyar, while before it half were not. I am sure the neighboring countries would be more than happy to instead expel hundreds of thousands of Magyars and thus colonize the land left behind.
 
I actually could see a Trianon slightly more unfavorable to Hungary--e.g., Austria gets Sopron. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sopron But outright destruction of the Hungarian state was not practical--it was not only too blatant a violation of self-determination [1] but rcould be done only by giving Romania, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia far more Magyars than they wanted (or else by in effect recreating Austria-Hungary which was the last thing the Allies wanted).

[1] The Allies were of course prepared to violate self-detramination but only "at the margins"--denying former enemy nations some territories viewed as strategically important for the victors, but not destroying the nations themselves.
 
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