TV-Series
Description
Tao Jun, born October 10, 1981, in Guizhou, China, is the eldest daughter of the Tao shamans, a lineage commanding jiangshi—reanimated corpses. As heir, her upbringing revolved around advancing family ambitions, prioritizing her brother Tao Ren’s ascent in the Shaman Fight. Initially treating her jiangshi, Lee Pyron, as a disposable asset, she clung to rigid ideologies until Asakura Yoh’s empathy toward spirits reshaped her worldview, fostering a partnership with Pyron rooted in mutual respect.

Her striking appearance blends tradition and mystique: layered pine-green hair frames indigo eyes, while her black-and-green qipao, embroidered with a golden dragon and panda, symbolizes familial legacy. A talisman-stocked garter straps her left leg, tools for jiangshi control. Trained in human anatomy, she mends Pyron’s body—a skill refined under Sati Saigan to resurrect humans, merging medical precision with shamanic art.

Lee Pyron, her guardian ghost, was a Hong Kong martial arts star assassinated by Tao Chin. Gifted as Jun’s birthday asset, he obeyed via blood talismans until gradual autonomy emerged, culminating in mechanical augmentations: piston-driven pile bunkers fused with Tao techniques. Their bond transformed from coercion to collaboration after Pyron rebelled during Jun’s clash with Yoh, destroying his talisman to defy her command—a turning point in her evolution.

Driven by loyalty to Ren, Jun confronted Yoh early, seeking Amidamaru for her brother’s advantage. Pyron’s defiance during this battle unraveled her rigid authority, steering her toward alliances with Yoh’s faction against larger threats. Post-Ren’s Shaman Fight defeat, she challenged her father to free her brother, enduring imprisonment and Pyron’s disassembly as punishment. Later, as Leidi Group’s vice-president, she wielded her inherited Four Perils against the Dong Family, executed global missions in Paris, and aided crises like tracking Redseb and Seyram during Hao’s conflict.

Beyond duty, Jun indulges in shopping and savors mahua. Her name, meaning “moisture” or “richness,” mirrors her family’s cultural roots. From ruthless enforcer to an independent strategist balancing ethics and legacy, her journey defies obedience, embracing autonomy without forsaking her heritage.