- Crazy Taxi World Tour is officially coming in 2027, confirmed during the Xbox Games Showcase.
- Crazy Taxi World Tour will launch on Xbox Series X/S, PS5, PC via Steam, and Nintendo Switch 2.
- The Offspring’s ‘All I Want’ returns in the new trailer, leaning hard into nostalgia for longtime fans.
- Sega’s reboot hints at multiple global locations beyond the classic San Francisco-inspired city setting.
- Crazy Taxi World Tour is officially coming in 2027, confirmed during the Xbox Games Showcase.
- Crazy Taxi World Tour will launch on Xbox Series X/S, PS5, PC via Steam, and Nintendo Switch 2.
- The Offspring’s ‘All I Want’ returns in the new trailer, leaning hard into nostalgia for longtime fans.
- Sega’s reboot hints at multiple global locations beyond the classic San Francisco-inspired city setting.
Table of Contents
Crazy Taxi World Tour Is Sega’s Biggest Franchise Bet in Years
Crazy Taxi World Tour has a release window, a platform list, and a trailer full of sharks leaping out of the ocean — which, honestly, is exactly the kind of energy this series demands. Sega officially unveiled the game during the Xbox Games Showcase, confirming a 2027 launch across Xbox Series X/S, Xbox on PC, Steam, PS5, and Nintendo Switch 2. That’s a wide net, and it signals that Sega isn’t treating this as a niche throwback. This is a full-scale, multiplatform reboot of one of the most recognisable arcade franchises of the late 1990s.
The original Crazy Taxi hit Dreamcast after a strong arcade run and became a cultural touchstone almost immediately — partly because of its frantic cab-driving gameplay, partly because of its irreverent attitude, and no small part thanks to a soundtrack that put The Offspring on repeat in living rooms across the world. The series has had a complicated few years since then, with mobile entries and digital re-releases keeping it on life support but never really scratching that original itch.
The last mainline game in the series arrived back in 2017, making this reboot nearly a decade in the making. That’s a long time in gaming, and the industry has shifted dramatically in the interim. The question Sega is now betting on: does Crazy Taxi still have the cultural voltage to compete in 2027’s market?
What the Trailer Actually Shows Us
The reveal trailer is short on hard gameplay details but long on personality, which is probably the right call at this stage. You’ve got a San Francisco-style city as at least part of the setting — those hills, the coastal backdrop, the Golden Gate-adjacent iconography — but the ‘World Tour’ branding strongly suggests the game will take players to multiple cities across the globe. Passengers hauling improbable stacks of pizza boxes are back. Chaos is clearly still the core design language.
What stands out, though, is how polished it looks compared to what the franchise has historically produced. Current-gen hardware allows Sega to push a level of visual fidelity the original Dreamcast game could only dream of, and the trailer makes the most of that. Whether the gameplay loop can match the visual ambition is the real open question.
A couple of years ago, early reporting suggested the new Crazy Taxi would incorporate open-world and MMO-style elements — think a persistent city where drivers compete, collaborate, and cause mayhem in real time. The trailer doesn’t explicitly confirm or deny that direction, but the scope on display and the ‘World Tour’ framing feel consistent with something bigger than a straightforward single-player remaster. Sega hasn’t said the word ‘multiplayer’ outright, but the bones are there if you’re reading between the lines.
The Offspring Are Back — and That Matters More Than You’d Think
Here’s the thing about The Offspring’s ‘All I Want’: it isn’t just a licensed track from the original Crazy Taxi. For an entire generation of players, that song and that game are neurologically fused. The opening guitar riff doesn’t just trigger a memory — it triggers a specific feeling of being 15, sitting close to a TV screen, and flooring it down a pixel-rendered San Francisco hill with a fare screaming in the back seat.
Sega knows this, obviously. The fact that ‘All I Want’ appears in the Crazy Taxi World Tour trailer isn’t accidental — it’s a calculated piece of emotional engineering. Nostalgia is one of gaming’s most reliable marketing tools right now, and Sega is using it deliberately. The trick, of course, is that nostalgia alone can fill a trailer but it can’t carry a full game. Players who grew up with Crazy Taxi will show up on launch day because of that song. Whether they stay depends entirely on whether the game itself delivers.
Where This Fits in Sega’s Bigger Picture
Sega’s path over the last few years has been uneven. The company publicly announced a ‘Super Game’ initiative — an ambitious plan to build a flagship global title with a massive budget and a long development runway. That plan was quietly shelved earlier this year, which raised real questions about where Sega’s priorities now sit. Crazy Taxi World Tour, alongside other classic IP revivals reportedly in development, looks like the company’s answer: instead of one enormous moonshot, back a portfolio of beloved franchises with modern production values and see what sticks.
It’s a more conservative bet, but arguably a smarter one. The Crazy Taxi brand has genuine global recognition. It doesn’t require Sega to build an audience from scratch. The IP does the heavy lifting on awareness — the development team just needs to make a game that lives up to the name.
There’s also a timing angle worth considering. The Nintendo Switch 2 is positioned to be a major platform in the 2026–2027 window, and launching Crazy Taxi World Tour day-and-date on that hardware suggests Sega is treating it as a serious sales opportunity, not an afterthought port. The original Crazy Taxi thrived on a console — the Dreamcast — that was beloved by its owners but commercially limited. Getting onto Switch 2 from day one is a very different proposition.
What Sega Needs to Get Right
The arcade-style, get-in-get-out gameplay loop that defined the original is going to need careful handling in an era dominated by open-world fatigue. Players have spent the better part of a decade inside enormous maps with hundreds of hours of content. Crazy Taxi’s original genius was its brevity and intensity — three minutes, full throttle, top dollar. If Sega stretches that into a bloated open world for the sake of modern expectations, it risks losing the very thing that made the franchise worth reviving.
On the other hand, if those early MMO-adjacent reports are accurate, there’s a version of Crazy Taxi World Tour that captures the chaos of the original while adding a social layer that makes it persistently entertaining. Games like Fortnite and Rocket League have proven that arcade-adjacent, easy-to-pick-up multiplayer titles have an enormous ceiling. Sega doesn’t need to copy either of those games — but they’d be foolish not to study them.
2027 is still a fair way off, and there’s a lot Sega hasn’t shown yet. But the pieces on the board — an iconic IP, current-gen hardware across all major platforms, a nostalgia-primed audience, and what looks like genuine production ambition — are more promising than anything the Crazy Taxi series has had going for it in a long time. Now Sega just has to actually deliver the game.
Source: Engadget
Frequently Asked Questions
What platforms will Crazy Taxi World Tour release on?
Crazy Taxi World Tour is confirmed for Xbox Series X/S, Xbox on PC, Steam, PS5, and Nintendo Switch 2. The release window is 2027, though a specific launch date hasn’t been announced yet.
Does Crazy Taxi World Tour have an open-world mode?
Earlier reports suggested the new game would lean toward an open-world MMO format. The reveal trailer confirmed multiple locations and a larger scope, though full details about multiplayer or open-world mechanics haven’t been officially disclosed.
Is ‘All I Want’ by The Offspring in the new Crazy Taxi game?
Yes. The Offspring’s ‘All I Want,’ which became iconic thanks to its heavy use in the original Crazy Taxi, appears in the Crazy Taxi World Tour reveal trailer — a clear nod to franchise nostalgia.
When was the last Crazy Taxi game released before this?
The most recent Crazy Taxi title before World Tour was released in 2017. That makes this reboot the first major installment in nearly a decade.



