Since I've already typed up the Miner, I choose that one.
Genie, Tasked, Miner
CLIMATE/TERRAIN: Any
FREQUENCY: Rare
ORGANIZATION: Solitary
ACTIVITY CYCLE: Diurnal
DIET: Omnivore
INTELLIGENCE: High
TREASURE: Q(×10)
ALIGNMENT: Neutral
NO. APPEARING: 1-6
ARMOR CLASS: 0
MOVEMENT: 15
HIT DICE: 6
THAC0: 15
NO. OF ATTACKS: 2
DAMAGE/ATTACK: 3d6/3d6
SPECIAL ATTACKS: Spells
SPECIAL DEFENSES: See below
MAGIC RESISTANCE: Standard
SIZE: L (8’ tall)
MORALE: Elite (13)
LEVEL/XP VALUE: 1,400
Miner genies are a recent form of tasked genie employed by the dao, though they were created by the yakmen. Miner genies were once dao, but they have been compelled to work in mine shafts for so long that now they are hulking, driven creatures that live only to dig and carry stone.
Miner genies are as wide as they are tall; their height has been reduced so that they fit through narrow tunnels more easily. Their arms and legs are thick and powerful, and their hands end in digging claws so exaggerated that miner genies can no longer use their hands to eat; they must feed using their tiny snouts, like animals. Their heads are bullet-shaped, and they are entirely hairless.
Combat: Miner genies tear through stone steadily with their claws. In fact, their claws grow so quickly that if miner genies stop mining for more than a week the claws become ingrown, crippling the miner genie. They cannot use weapons.
Miner genies can cast detect metal or mineral, dig, faerie fire, and water breathing (for diving through flooded mine shafts) once per day. Like dao, they can assume a dusty gaseous form once per day, which they use to scout along cracks and seams in the rock. They can usually detect poisonous gases and unstable mine shafts (75%). No stone weapon can harm them.
Miner genies can collapse any mine shaft they have personally dug with a single blow, causing 6d10 (6-60) points of damage to anyone within the area of collapse who does not make a saving throw vs. death. The collapsing section can be up to 1,500 square feet. Those who make their saving throw suffer only 1-10 points of damage from rock shards and rebounding debris.they were not caught in the collapsed section. Miner genies are immune to the effects of these collapses.
Habitat/Society: Miner genies prefer dim light and dusty mines, where no genie or slave can see the dishonorable state to which they have been reduced. They are a universally grim, self-pitying lot, prone to fits of sudden rage. They are solitary throughout their entire lives; miner genies do not congregate for any reason and will fight to avoid each other’s company.
Miner genies never mate or bear children, because they do not want to bring others into the harsh servitude of the yakmen. However, their own lack of children makes them remarkably kind and gentle around the children of the dao, and they are occasionally allowed to serve as guardians for the illegitimate children of noble dao. These children are raised in the dim and despairing world of the miner genies until the dao parents think it is safe to declare their true parentage. A few of these children have been known to become miner genies themselves if left too long among the tasked genies.
Ecology: Miner genies eat stone, so just by living they mine out tunnels. They know that, individually, they are too weak to kill yakmen, but as they are not magically bound to serve the yakmen, there is always the chance that they might revolt and kill their masters. Although they know that the dao are helpless against the yakmen, the miners are irrationally angry that the dao do nothing to save them.
The yakmen consider the miner genies a great achievement, one that promotes efficiency and increases the wealth that they can offer to the Forgotten God. Miner genies are smaller and more manageable than the impudent dao, and some yakmen believe that all dao should be transformed into miner genies, so that they will always be servile. The dao might find the miner genies amusing if they had been formed from some slave race, but as their brothers, many feel that the miner genies are an abomination that should be done away with as soon as the yoke of the yakmen is lifted.
Originally appeared in Secret of the Lamp (1993).