main leads are male lead Mei Zhuyu, a Taoist practioner, no longer with the temple (in the novel) and the female…
he's human but she's half demon. she was born human with human parents, then something happens to her. The story will unfold I'm sure to explain their pasts
will the 2nd ML (guessing it's shu cz he's showing signs already) be annoying or will he get another interest…
someone said Shu is Wordless Book, a swindler, is one of Wu Zhen's two deputies, he did not have love interest in the novel. He was described as a half immortal fortune teller (divination), a swindler, a charlatan, a book spirit, a spirit of unknown age, is referred to as Wordless Book, Legendary book of heaven, the book without words from heaven, and this wordless book is his true form. He can tell fortunes from it. He begs in the demon market at night and told fortunes during the day. Many of the spirits you cannot tell them from humans. They can take many forms.
is it a HE and if so, do they get married or just lovers? cz the fl seems to be a freespirit not interested in…
When the right guy comes along... it's a HE. The courting is very proper, like in Pride and Prejudice. Moonlit reunion novel translation uses labels like "young lord" and "Lady Wu." It's super sweet and romantic.
main leads are male lead Mei Zhuyu, a Taoist practioner, no longer with the temple (in the novel) and the female…
half demon. in this drama, it's not a world setting of good versus evil. like you don't think oh demon is bad, Wu Zhen is half demon, a cat spirit, can turn into a cat, and, in the novel, she's actually very kind, and won't let anyone bully Mei Zhuyu. There's a lot of shape shifting with spirits.
Novel readers: is cat lord and snake lord both the main leads? Im now watching it. The pilot episode is good so…
main leads are male lead Mei Zhuyu, a Taoist practioner, no longer with the temple (in the novel) and the female lead is Wu Zhen, Cat Lord, half demon with cat spirit, goes to brothels in day, peace keeping at night. Snake Lord is a main character, or second female lead. She is a fox spirit and helps Cat Lord to keep peace in Demon city.
Last time I checked there's a xianxia element in the tag.. Is it not xianxia? Or am I just daydreaming? Lol Tysmm!!
Moonlit Reunion is definitely not xianxia as there are no immortals or god realm. There are only two realms, humans and demons (spirits). It's been broadly label as wuxia.
Mei is a righteous Taoist walking alone through a world of shadows—not to conquer it, but to keep it from falling apart. In the novel, there is no plot. In the trailer, I saw him investigating his parents' death. In the novel, he does practice his sword, but he only uses talismans. Mei grew up in the temple and became a powerful Taoist. There are sects and he is in the Daoist sect, but he acts alone, not part of a sect, unless the drama changes it so he returns to sect, but I don't think so. He works in the imperial ministry by day and at night, he really acting alone to fight demons only to keep peace, not to eliminate them. There is no good versus evil. Wu Zhen herself and her deputies are spirits or demons, and they are not part of some sect either. They're just being task with keeping the peace in demon city. The ideological core isn’t classic xia chivalry—it’s duty, balance, and containment.
Mei is not a xia, because he’s not driven by a chivalric code to fight injustice. He’s not part of jianghu, because he doesn’t live in that chaotic martial world of rival sects and wandering swordsmen. He’s not wuxia, because wuxia is defined by those two things: the code of xia and the world of jianghu. I see Mei as a solitary Taoist with a secret life, walking the line between duty and grief, peace and shadow.
This focus on balance over conquest or justice sets Moonlit Reunion apart from the heroic archetypes of wuxia or xianxia. If the novel’s essence is preserved, Mei’s solitary nature and lack of jianghu ties would likely remain central. The ideological core—duty, balance, containment—suggests a narrative more aligned with philosophical or spiritual traditions than martial heroism.
I guess you could call it Subverted Supernatural Wuxia, meaning it turns traditional wuxia troupe upside down
It’s still martial arts — through talismans, but not to fight for glory, and it’s still spiritual tradition But it flips the usual wuxia tropes: No sect loyalty (unless the drama changes it) No flashy cultivation (he's already the most powerful Taoist) No grand duels or honor-bound rivalries Instead: A righteous man investigating his parents’ mysterious death (from the trailer, not the novel) A world haunted by subtle supernatural forces A story that’s quiet, personal, and emotionally driven
What makes Moonlit Reunion so special. It is folklore rather than mythology or divine fantasy. Grounded in the Human-Spirit Connection No Celestial Hierarchies: Unlike mythologies that revolve around gods and heavenly realms, this story stays rooted in the earthly and ethereal. Spirits as Neighbors: The demons and spirits aren’t distant or omnipotent—they’re part of the landscape, sometimes protectors, sometimes tricksters, always complex. Folklore with Nuance Moral Complexity: Good and evil aren’t defined by species or power, but by actions and intentions. That’s classic folklore—where a fox spirit might be a villain in one tale and a hero in another. Rare and Refreshing: Most stories with supernatural elements lean into divine spectacle. Moonlit Reunion chooses intimacy, mystery, and emotional depth.
In the novel, Cat Lord (Wu Zhen) and Snake Lord (Liu Tai Zhen) maintained order in the East and West supernatural markets (I think in a trailer they called it shadow market?) or demon city. The two markets of East and West under the night are worlds that belong to inhuman things, and ordinary people cannot see them, nor can they enter these two demon cities." In the novel, Cat Lord and Snake Lord each have two deputies. Cat Lord's assistants are Hu Zhu (fox spirit) and Wordless Book or a book spirit... I think it might be Wu ZhiShu? and for Snake Lord's two deputies, in the cast, I only see one of them, Ling Xiao (wisteria spirit).
They spent something like 28 straight days filming at night and by night, I mean they worked during their normal sleeping hours and slept during their normal working hours. It was not easy at first to stay awake, imagine after a month, they had to switch back to normal hours. I'm sure there was a few days of transition, probably a lot of yawning.
it's ok, I don't' really care about 27.9K vs 28K. or whatever, not even ratings... ABAY was a huge hit, more than people realized.
Mei is a righteous Taoist walking alone through a world of shadows—not to conquer it, but to keep it from falling apart. In the novel, there is no plot. In the trailer, I saw him investigating his parents' death. In the novel, he does practice his sword, but he only uses talismans. Mei grew up in the temple and became a powerful Taoist. There are sects and he is in the Daoist sect, but he acts alone, not part of a sect, unless the drama changes it so he returns to sect, but I don't think so. He works in the imperial ministry by day and at night, he really acting alone to fight demons only to keep peace, not to eliminate them. There is no good versus evil. Wu Zhen herself and her deputies are spirits or demons, and they are not part of some sect either. They're just being task with keeping the peace in demon city. The ideological core isn’t classic xia chivalry—it’s duty, balance, and containment.
Mei is not a xia, because he’s not driven by a chivalric code to fight injustice. He’s not part of jianghu, because he doesn’t live in that chaotic martial world of rival sects and wandering swordsmen. He’s not wuxia, because wuxia is defined by those two things: the code of xia and the world of jianghu. I see Mei as a solitary Taoist with a secret life, walking the line between duty and grief, peace and shadow.
This focus on balance over conquest or justice sets Moonlit Reunion apart from the heroic archetypes of wuxia or xianxia. If the novel’s essence is preserved, Mei’s solitary nature and lack of jianghu ties would likely remain central. The ideological core—duty, balance, containment—suggests a narrative more aligned with philosophical or spiritual traditions than martial heroism.
I guess you could call it Subverted Supernatural Wuxia, meaning it turns traditional wuxia troupe upside down
It’s still martial arts — through talismans, but not to fight for glory, and it’s still spiritual tradition
But it flips the usual wuxia tropes:
No sect loyalty (unless the drama changes it)
No flashy cultivation (he's already the most powerful Taoist)
No grand duels or honor-bound rivalries
Instead:
A righteous man investigating his parents’ mysterious death (from the trailer, not the novel)
A world haunted by subtle supernatural forces
A story that’s quiet, personal, and emotionally driven
Grounded in the Human-Spirit Connection
No Celestial Hierarchies: Unlike mythologies that revolve around gods and heavenly realms, this story stays rooted in the earthly and ethereal.
Spirits as Neighbors: The demons and spirits aren’t distant or omnipotent—they’re part of the landscape, sometimes protectors, sometimes tricksters, always complex.
Folklore with Nuance
Moral Complexity: Good and evil aren’t defined by species or power, but by actions and intentions. That’s classic folklore—where a fox spirit might be a villain in one tale and a hero in another.
Rare and Refreshing: Most stories with supernatural elements lean into divine spectacle. Moonlit Reunion chooses intimacy, mystery, and emotional depth.
In the novel, Cat Lord and Snake Lord each have two deputies. Cat Lord's assistants are Hu Zhu (fox spirit) and Wordless Book or a book spirit... I think it might be Wu ZhiShu? and for Snake Lord's two deputies, in the cast, I only see one of them, Ling Xiao (wisteria spirit).
They spent something like 28 straight days filming at night and by night, I mean they worked during their normal sleeping hours and slept during their normal working hours. It was not easy at first to stay awake, imagine after a month, they had to switch back to normal hours. I'm sure there was a few days of transition, probably a lot of yawning.