Official information is expected.
"Taxi" is great when you want dynamics and the feeling that justice can still catch up — albeit by an unconventional route.

The third season of "Taxi" is exactly what fans love about Korean crime dramas: a fast-paced plot, tough cases, and a sense of justice that the official system is not always able to provide. The "Rainbow Taxi" team is back to tackle cases where the law falters: corruption, violence, blackmail, fraud, abuse, and crimes that are conveniently "overlooked." At the center is Kim Do-gi: a vengeful driver who knows how to be both a cold executor and a person still capable of empathizing with those who have nowhere else to turn.
The season follows a "case of the week" format but gradually builds a larger threat — those who consider themselves above the law. There is plenty of action, undercover operations, investigations, and tactics, but equally important are the moral choices: where protection ends and revenge begins, whether one can remain oneself in a world that punishes weakness, and how many times a person has the right to "be reborn" after becoming a weapon.
The final episodes feel like a report on a war fought: victories do not seem easy, losses are not random, and the cost of "work" turns out to be higher than one would like. If you love dynamic thrillers about retribution, team chemistry, and social issues without rose-colored filters — season 3 closes the arc powerfully and meaningfully.
Do I need to watch seasons 1-2?
Highly recommended: characters and their motivations are revealed gradually.
Is it more of an action or a detective series?
Equal parts: investigations + operations + action.
Is the season complete?
Yes, all 16 episodes have been released.
What is the series about in general?
About a "taxi" that helps victims and punishes criminals when the law is powerless.
Is there an overarching plotline?
Yes: besides individual cases, the season leads to a larger adversary.