Maedar
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Maedars are an obscure Dungeons & Dragons monster from the days of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons who exist to answer the question "so, what's the male version of a medusa anyway?" The answer, according to TSR, is an apparently normal but completely hairless human-seeming man, who can transmute stone to flesh with his touch, is completely immune to any and all petrification or paralysis effects, is immune to the bite of a medusa's serpentine hair, and pass through stone as if it were thin air. They are described as "incredibly rare", and largely focused on finding a medusa to mate with - they are described as lifelong monogamists who are fiercely devoted to their chosen spouses.
Ironically, maedar reproduction is so absurd it's borderline parasitic - if not as weird as the sphinx mating habits, it's pretty damn close! See, if a medusa decides to do the nasty with a human baby daddy, she'll lay a clutch of 2d3 eggs, all of whom will be new medusas. If she does it with a maedar on the other hand... those 2d3 eggs? 25% of the hatchlings will be males, and 75% will be females. One percent of the male hatchlings will be maedars; the other 99% of male hatchlings, and all of the female hatchlings, will be perfectly normal humans! Who usually end up turning to stone at the first sight of mommy dearest, which you might expect doesn't do a lot for their sanity!
An update of the maedar to Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition can be found in the Creature Catalog VI in Dragon Magazine #355. They've been pretty much forgotten since then.
Dying maedar can transform themselves into half-undead, half-elemental beings called Glyptars by binding their soul to a gemstone. If this gem is dug up, it can animate up to 1,000 pounds of inorganic material, which can be used to create a cheap golem or animated weapon. The glyptar retains its stone-to-flesh and earthwalk powers in this form as well.