It is a good question. If you don't have the experience you don't have anything to base common sense on. Never be afraid or apologetic about asking a question. We all have to start somewhere. If someone tries to bully you about it, send them to me.
I think you have two cockerels. The Orp is easy. With those thick legs, a tail feather bending down, and the pointy hackle feathers I'm pretty sure the Wyandotte is too. Nice looking birds.
Why do you want roosters? The only reason you need a rooster is if you want fertile eggs. Anything else is personal preference. I always suggest you keep as few males as you can and met your goals. That is not because you are guaranteed problems with more roosters but that problems are more likely with more roosters. Sometimes the correct answer is zero. I like to avoid stress when I can.
If you decide you are better off without them there are several ways you can go about that without eating them yourself. I don't know which country you are in so I can't make specific recommendations.
Some of your options will depend on how much room you have. The more room you have the more likely things can work out. I'm not talking about that 4 square feet in the coop plus 10 in the run type of numbers you so often see on the forum, I'm talking about a lot more.
In spite of what you read on here, there is no magic ratio of females to males and no magic numbers as per a specific square feet per chicken. What works for each of us will vary because of all the different variables. Some of that depends on the personalities of the individual chickens, some on how the room is set up as well as how much room you have, some depends on your expectations and what you see as acceptable behavior. There are plenty of other variables too. Sometimes these things go so smoothly you wonder what all the fuss was about. Sometimes chickens die. Usually it is in between, not peaceful but not deadly.
Each case can vary but you can typically expect the two boys to decide which is boss. Hopefully you only have the two. That will probably involve fighting. Sometimes that gets really violent, sometimes it is more a case of running away and chasing. That's part of why room is important, the loser needs to be able to run away. That's how they say "you win". One may wind up seriously injuring or killing the other, they may work out an accommodation where they work together to take care of the flock. You never know what it will be.
Another aspect that can really bother people is that the boys hormones will cause them to want to dominant the pullets. The way they do this is to mate them, often by force. At this age the mating act more about dominance than sex. The one on bottom is accepting the dominance of the one on top, either willingly or by force. The pullets are typically not mature enough to accept the cockerels dominance so they usually resist, typically by running away. Since the cockerel's hormones are telling him to dominate he chases and forces if he can catch them. As someone in here once said watching them go through puberty is often not for the faint of heart. Once the boys and girls mature into responsible adults this behavior tends to really calm down, but pullets and cockerels are not mature responsible adults.
Usually no pullet or cockerels are seriously injured during all this, though occasionally chickens die. It can get pretty violent. For some people this can be really hard to watch. That's part of what I meant by your expectations. Some people think the pullets are so stressed by this that they have to intervene. You'll probably see this behavior with just one cockerel, but having two much more than doubles the likelihood.
So what are your options other than getting rid of one or two cockerels. One is to wait and see how bad it really gets. You may come through it fine, though the tighter the space the less likely that is.
You can make a bachelor pad. House one or both boys in a separate pen where there are no girls to fight over. Many people on here have done that quite successfully. When you are dealing with living animals no one can give you any guarantees, but this is a typical solution that usually works.
You can build two separate pens and give each boy his own harem. If you try that I'd suggest the bachelor pad until the pullets have been laying at least a month. By then they may be mature enough that you avoid a lot of that teenage drama. In spite of the magic rations of males to females you often read about on here, many people are very successful with pretty low rations. But the secret to that is that they are talking about mature chickens, not immature adolescents.
Good luck!