Fan Xian's father was the Qing Emperor. The Qing Emperor was Fan Xian's biological father. He was the ruler of the Qing Kingdom and Fan Xian's biological father. At first, the Qing Emperor was very wary of Fan Xian, but later, he might have developed a father-son relationship. The Qing Emperor was a person who was good at enduring. He had the ambition to unify the world. He was one of the Four Great Grandmasters, but he held a disdainful attitude towards them. The Qing Emperor had played a driving role in Fan Xian's growth, but he also saw him as a chess piece.
Fan Xian's fathers were the Qing Emperor, Fan Jian, Lin Ruofu, Fei Jie, Chen Pingping, and Wu Zhu.
Fan Xian's father was the Qing Emperor. The Qing Emperor was Fan Xian's biological father. He was one of the Four Great Grandmasters and the mastermind behind the murder of Fan Xian's mother, Ye Qingmei. The Qing Emperor was good at forbearance. He had the unity of the world in his heart and held a disdainful and fearful attitude toward the Four Grandmasters. He believed that without the existence of the Four Great Grandmasters, he could unify Northern Qi and Dongyi with his own abilities. Fan Xian's adoptive father, Fan Jian, was not his biological father. He was the Qing Emperor's illegitimate son. Fan Xian's identity was that of a prince. Before Fan Xian was born, the Qing Emperor had known that he was his and Ye Qingmei's son and had always paid attention to his growth.
Fan Xian's biological father was the Qing Emperor. Although Fan Xian had many fathers, including the Qing Emperor, Lin Ruofu, Fan Jian, and Chen Pingping, the Qing Emperor was his biological father. The Qing Emperor was the ruler of the Qing Kingdom. His identity had always been a mystery of Fan Xian's past until the plot gradually revealed itself. In the play, the Qing Emperor loved and protected Fan Xian.