TV-Series
Description
Jun Tao, born October 10, 1981, in Guizhou, China, belongs to the Tao Family—an ancient shaman clan mastering corpse reanimation. As elder sister to Tao Ren, she was molded by rigid family traditions, conditioned to prioritize their ambitions above all. She initially treated her Jiang Shi, corpses animated via blood talismans, as disposable instruments until a pivotal encounter with Asakura Yoh revealed the transformative potential of mutual shaman-spirit respect.

Her guardian spirit, Lee Pyron, a celebrated kung-fu star assassinated by Tao Chin, was gifted to Jun as a morbid birthday offering. Bound initially by talismans, Pyron regained free will after Yoh shattered his control seal, compelling Jun to rebuild their dynamic through synchronization. Enhanced with mechanical arm-mounted pile bunkers, Pyron became a prototype merging Tao necromancy with experimental technology.

Jun’s loyalty to the Tao legacy clashed fiercely with her devotion to Ren. During Ren’s duel with Yoh in the Shaman Fight, she openly defied patriarch Tao En, demanding her brother’s liberation—an act that led to her imprisonment and Pyron’s dismantling. She later reconciled with Ren after he abandoned the family’s brutality, leveraging her surgical expertise to restore Pyron repeatedly. This skill earned her apprenticeship under Sati Saigan, refining advanced resurrection methods.

Post-Shaman Fight, Jun ascended to vice-president of the Leidi Group under Ren’s leadership, combating rivals like the Dong Family and inheriting her grandfather’s Four Perils artifacts. In Paris, she executed covert operations for the Tao, neutralizing threats while coordinating with allies such as Hang Zang-Ching.

Jun’s indigo eyes and pine-green layered hair complement her black-and-green qipao, embroidered with a golden dragon and panda. Her practical talisman-storing garter underscores a blend of tradition and utility. Once ruthlessly pragmatic, she evolved into a strategic ally for Ren and Yoh’s coalition, confronting existential dangers like Hao Asakura.

Her trajectory reflects a departure from ancestral dogma toward valuing autonomy and reciprocal trust—embodied in her partnership with Pyron and willingness to forge alliances beyond family interests, reshaping her role within the shaman world through defiance and innovation.