Taxi Chaos 2 Review
Taxi Chaos 2 finally screeches onto PS5 after its earlier holiday drop on other platforms, promising bigger ideas and a brighter city to tear through. If you’ve been itching for arcade‑style sprints with wild shortcuts and tight timers, this sequel definitely tries to deliver.

San Valeda looks the part: bold colors, stacked layers, and routes that don’t stay put. One shift might be clear skies and open streets; the next throws up roadworks, restricted zones, or pea‑soup fog that forces you to improvise. That constant churn keeps you on your toes, and when you nail a rooftop hop into a back‑alley shortcut, the game absolutely sings.
The flip side is that the city’s vertical sprawl can overwhelm. When you’re hustling against the clock and the GPS flakes out, the thrill can slide into frustration. It’s a recurring complaint, and on a map this dense, bad routing stings twice as much.
The sequel leans into a pulpy story hook: Vinny and Cleo are back, and they’re up against Cleo’s own AI taxi network gone rogue. That means you’re not just beating the timer—you’re dodging, juking, and sometimes trading paint with aggressive TaxiBots that block lanes, steal fares, and escalate across chapters. On paper, it’s a great wrinkle that cranks up the chaos.

In practice, the combat doesn’t hit as hard as it should. Collisions feel light and floaty, so whether you’re being rammed or trying to clear space, impact rarely lands with satisfying weight. Given how central the TaxiBots are, this lack of physicality undercuts otherwise cool moments.
Handling is snappier than the first game, and the three taxi classes give you real identity: Heavy to bully traffic, Sport for raw speed, Drift for those graceful, wall‑skimming turns. Power‑ups add spice without turning every run into chaos soup. On PS5’s DualSense, the Drift setup, in particular, feels smooth and expressive when you’re chaining corners.

The new Story Mode adds structure beyond endless sprints. Shifts roll through morning, day, and night; you rank up, take on bite‑sized missions, and plough earnings into upgrades for your taxis and company. The loop—a little challenge, a little cash, a little progress—fits the game’s pick‑up‑and‑play rhythm and plays nicely with the city’s shifting ruleset.
Even with the larger toolbox, repetition creeps in. Fare types blur together, and set‑piece missions don’t always escalate in ways that surprise. When the GPS gets temperamental, that grindy feeling only worsens—you’re not learning the city so much as wrestling it.
On PS5, the game loads fast, runs clean, and looks bright and inviting. The soundtrack and VO do their job without stealing the show. It’s a colorful package that shines best in quick sessions, where the city’s constant shuffles feel fresh rather than fatiguing.

Taxi Chaos 2 is a clear step up from its predecessor: a bigger playground, smarter progression, and a cheeky AI twist that keeps the pressure on. But floaty collisions, a flaky GPS, and creeping repetition keep it from breaking into must‑play territory. If you love arcade racers and the simple joy of shaving seconds off a route, there’s fun here—just expect a few potholes along the way.





