Tai Lung sat in his small cage with a hollow spirit. The once-mighty warrior now felt his strength sapped, not by a worthy glorious battle, but by the foul trickery of the tiny chameleon he looked down upon. She had stolen his chi… and with it, his kung fu. Once, he stood proud, fierce, unmatched. Now, he could barely move his body.
When the fat panda had defeated him long ago, Tai Lung had hated it, but he had understood it. That fight had not been just a clash of skill. The fat panda, as ridiculous as he seemed, was chosen. Destined. The Dragon Warrior. Fated to win. In time, Tai Lung had come to accept it. The old turtle had been right, he was not the dragon warrior, he was not destined to the greatness he believed.
But in the Spirit Realm, things had been different. He had found a path again, a chance to train and improve, a chance to rise higher than before, until Kai, the old warlord, crushed it. That fight… Tai Lung could justify that loss. Kai had taken him off guard, and already held the chi of dozens of masters. He was older, experienced beyond mortal years. Defeat then was bitter, but not shameful. Tai Lung had become a jade, a mere energy source. Still, he could live with that disgrace.
But now? Now it was different.
He had been bested by a chameleon. A weak, slippery thing. A trickster without true strength. She had no right… no right to win against him. And yet she had. Tai Lung's claws trembled against the cold iron of his cage floor. His thoughts spun in circles. Was his skill fading? Or had his pride blinded him for too long? For the second time in his life, doubt crept into his mind, sharp and cold like a dagger. He did not know how long he sat there. Time had lost all meaning.
Then… he saw him.
Po. The fat panda. After all these years, sneaking around. Even in his weakened state, Tai Lung snarled and lashed, rage boiling up from the depths of his wounded pride. It didn't matter that Po had been the Dragon Warrior. It didn't matter that fate had chosen him. Why him? Why had Oogway decided that he was worthy? What made that bumbling, dim-witted panda so special?
And yet… Tai Lung watched.
He watched Po, alongside that annoying little sidekick, face the chameleon, the same one who had defeated him. But this time… the panda won. The chameleon, now bloated with the stolen chi and skills of dozens of masters, was still no match for Po. And Tai Lung knew then, with a bitter twist in his gut, that he himself would have lost too. He was too weak. At that moment, she was far stronger than him.
When the cages broke and he was freed, he stood among the other masters. All walking toward Po. He didn't speak. Anger burned in his chest, but he didn't lash out. Not this time. A part of him screamed at him that he had missed something all along. Something important. Something that mattered more than strength.
Standing before Po, he finally spoke.
"I take back what I said," Tai Lung murmured, voice rough like gravel. "Maybe… Oogway was right after all."
And then, slowly, painfully, he bowed.
The gesture was surreal even to him. What else could he do? Po had saved him. He had defeated the chameleon, again and again proving his strength was more than muscle or skill. Tai Lung couldn't bear it. The shame twisted in his gut like a blade. All he wanted in that moment was to leave. To return to the Spirit Realm. To be free from this humiliating reminder of his failure, of his insignificance.
Po, ever gentle, nodded and waved his staff. From it, two golden dragons rose into the air and spiraled around a tear in the fabric of reality. A gate to the Spirit Realm shimmered open. Tai Lung stepped forward, gripping the chameleon tightly. She screamed, thrashed, her form flickering. But she was weak now, too weak to escape Tai Lung's iron grip.
He stepped through the gate last.
Within the Spirit Realm, the other masters stood waiting. Silent. Watching. All eyes turned to the defeated chameleon in Tai Lung's grasp. Anger burned behind every gaze. Justice, vengeance call it what they would. Tai Lung didn't care. He hurled the chameleon forward, letting her collapse at their feet.
"Yours," he said flatly.
Then he turned and walked away.
He didn't care what they would do to her. They wouldn't let her go easily, he knew that much. But he didn't want part in it. Not now. He needed… solitude.
He wandered for a long time.
The Spirit Realm was vast and strange. Floating islands, glowing trees, endless skies. He walked until he stumbled across a familiar presence.
Master Oogway.
The old turtle sat, serene, meditating with eyes closed. Peaceful as ever. Tai Lung's breath caught. He hesitated.
Then, slowly, he stepped closer.
Oogway's eyes opened. He smiled, warm and gentle.
"This is the first time you've sought me out," he said softly.
Tai Lung didn't respond at first. His jaw tightened. Then, finally:
"How did you know?" he asked. "How did you know I wasn't the Dragon Warrior? How could you see the darkness and the destiny of someone?"
Oogway hummed, the sound like a breeze through leaves.
"I didn't," he said. "But a true Dragon Warrior is humble. You were prideful. Had you chosen to accept my decision, to let go of your pride… perhaps you could have been the Dragon Warrior."
Tai Lung's ears flicked. His eyes narrowed.
"So it was a test," he said bitterly. "And I failed."
Oogway's voice turned firm, but not harsh. "You are here because you still refuse to see your own faults. You blame me. You blame Shifu. You even blame Po. But the truth is… bitterness and rage were forged into your being. You refuse to accept the past and let go of your rage."
Tai Lung didn't reply. For a moment, he wanted to attack the old turtle but he stopped himself, it was pointless, it won't change anything regardless of the outcome.
Oogway continued "But more importantly, did you truly want to be the Dragon Warrior? Was that dream your own?"
Tai Lung didn't answer, he knew what the old turtle meant, he wanted to be the Dragon Warrior just to make Shifu proud. Shifu believed he was destined for greatness, so he would get that greatness.
In the end, Tai Lung turned away, his silent leave was louder than words.
Oogway watched him go, a tinge of disappointment and pity in his wise old eyes. Then, he closed them again and returned to his meditation, the wind carrying a whisper of regret through the stillness.
Tai Lung moved silently between the floating islands of the Spirit Realm. The mist parted for him as he leapt across the ancient floating rocks and islands, each step landing with controlled precision. Eventually, he reached a relatively large island, peaceful and empty, distant from the others. He stood at its center, the stillness pressing in around him like a cold fog.
Oogway's words echoed in his head.
'A true Dragon Warrior is humble.'
Tai Lung's jaw tightened.
Humble? That was ridiculous. Pride didn't mean darkness, it meant he had something that made him better than others, made him worthy. All of his life was about making his father proud, nothing brought his life meaning and joy like the praise of his father.
That was Oogway's clue to his darkness? Did Oogway really think that? or did he choose to lie to him?
Tai Lung shook his head, it was too late now to think about it.
"I don't want to be weak, I don't want to lose again" Tai Lung muttered under his breath, claws curling into fists.
He narrowed his eyes, took a deep breath, and dropped into a stance.
The air around him shifted as he began to move. Punches. Kicks. Fluid strikes of his kung fu. His muscles surged with every motion. The energy inside him churned, coiled like a dragon ready to strike. With each blow, more and more of his chi surged outward, rippling through the air in radiant pulses.
He needed to be better. Faster. Stronger. Deadlier.
He moved with renewed purpose, a storm of motion on the quiet island. His strikes cracked the ground beneath him, the air trembling with the force of his will. Each motion released more chi, the brilliant light began trailing his limbs like afterimages of pure power.
Then… he noticed it.
A tree nearby began to glow.
Tai Lung froze mid-strike, panting softly. He turned slowly toward the source. The tree's bark shimmered with red light, deep, resonant and alive. He had never seen this before in the Spirit Realm. He approached it cautiously, eyes narrowed, all senses alert.
The tree hummed, a low, musical vibration that thrummed through his chest like a heartbeat. Energy swirled around it, strange and ancient.
He reached out.
As his fingers touched the bark, a flash of light consumed him.
Suddenly, he felt as though he were submerged in water. Cold. Heavy. Silent. His body was weightless, but unresponsive, he couldn't move his limbs, couldn't breathe, couldn't scream. Panic surged inside him, but there was no air, no way to cry out.
Then he surfaced.
Air filled his lungs, though he hadn't realized he'd needed it. Before him stood a towering being, tree-like in form, but far stranger. Its body was composed of wood and shimmering spirit-light, and atop its trunk, several heads bloomed like grotesque flowers.
The creature spoke in a calm, feminine voice.
"This is the first time I see a spirit like you," it said. "You are not supposed to be here."
Tai Lung tried to respond, but his voice didn't work. His limbs wouldn't move. He only stared, helpless.
The creature paused, then spoke again.
"No matter, you shall return to the cycle of life."
There was no warning, only a surge of light.
It engulfed him again. And then… warmth. Softness.
Tai Lung blinked.
He couldn't move, couldn't speak, but he could see. He was no longer in the Spirit Realm. He was in the arms of… something. An animal unlike any he had seen before, but its face was gentle. Loving. It looked down on him with what he could only describe as a smile.
The creature spoke, voice trembling with joy.
"I am finally holding my son."
Another voice drifted in, warm and teasing.
"Our son."
Then, more firmly:
"As we agreed… we shall name him Tai."
Tai Lung's, Tai's, eyes fluttered slowly, trying to make sense of this impossible moment. He couldn't move. Couldn't speak. Only stare.
The two strange animals held him gently between them, gazing down with affection and awe.
And just like that… Tai Lung's story began again.