More legend than truth is known about the halfelementals. Like other races of Athas, the genasi lost their recorded history with the rise of the sorcererkings. Only those tales handed down through oral tradition have survived. The genasi recount these legends empower and motivate the young and to sustain their race during the long generations of exile.
Each enclave tells its own version of the origin myth, but the central theme is the same. The genasi claim to have been created shortly after the Lords of Stone and Fire, Wind and Rain shaped the world out of chaos. With the world complete, the primordials infused their essence into raw elemental material to give it life and purpose as the first genasi.
The primordials created these offspring to serve as helpers, builders, protectors, and warriors, because they knew that their great rivals, the gods, sought to claim creation as their own and populate it with creatures in their own image. The primordials resented any interference and worked to ensure their creations would rule the world.
For eons, neither side held sway. The world existed in balance, and Athas enjoyed an era of prosperity dimly remembered as the Green Age. But toward the end of that time, war broke out between the primordials and the gods. The primordials emerged from the Elemental Chaos to destroy the gods of Athas and, with the aid of their chosen people, scattered their enemies' immortal servants to the farthest reaches of the cosmos.
That terrible conflict taxed the primordials sorely, and they withdrew into a deep slumber that lasts to this day. They had confidence that their children would protect the primordials’ creation from outside meddling, but this confidence was an error. The genasi, a widespread and varied people, inherited their makers’ fractious nature, and there was no peace among them. Each tribe or faction attempted to assert dominance over the other. While the genasi fought among themselves, the fecund mortal races grew and thrived until their numbers dwarfed those of the genasi, and their resentment over the genasi's sense of entitlement sparked into war. Outnumbered and threatened by terrible magic, the genasi fled to the world’s farthest corners and left the world to the upstarts.
The genasi watched from their hidden redoubts while the victorious races grew mighty, but the genasi were not idle. They studied many forms of magic to enhance their already potent abilities. The half-elementals were horrified when the Green Age gave way to the bloody Red Age, when conquerors mounted terrible genocidal campaigns to purge the world of people they despised. The genasi were shaken by the defiling magic that swept across the once-verdant paradise, but they took no part in the wars. Instead, they waited for their enemies to destroy themselves.
In the end, the sorcerer-kings emerged unchallenged and claimed the world as their prize,
condemning all other peoples to suffering and toil
under their rule. The genasi believe this was a just
punishment for those who drove them nearly to
extinction. Yet a few genasi mourned the world’s
slow death and the ruination of the elemental spirits
they had served for so long. Their anger and despair
were matched, however, by an equal fear of the dread
sorcerer-kings that prevailed, and in particular, the
Dragon of Tyr, which had caused so much of the
world’s destruction. So the genasi remained hidden
and apart, unwilling to save the world that had been
bequeathed to them in the dim past.