SaatPro
Where Technology Meets Clarity
SaatPro
Where Technology Meets Clarity
Picture this.
It’s 2018. The world is buzzing about flying cars. Elon Musk is busy drilling holes under LA, Uber is making promises about drones that look like rejected Batman gadgets, and Germany — the land of engineering gods, autobahns, and beer festivals — suddenly steps into the chat like:
“Hold my bratwurst. We will give the world air taxis.”
Enter two proud gladiators of the sky: Volocopter and Lilium. Both strutted into the startup colosseum, armed with PowerPoints, slick prototypes, and an unshakable belief that people will soon ditch Uber rides for Uber-flights.
Fast-forward to today?
One is financially wobbling like a Jenga tower in an earthquake, and the other is firing employees faster than reality TV contestants get voted off the island.
So buckle up. This is not just about flying taxis. It’s about ambition, money, ego, survival, and the eternal truth of startups: gravity always wins.
Startups are like toddlers. They see something shiny, crawl toward it, fall a dozen times, and still think they can run a marathon. Only difference? Startups burn investor money instead of milk.
The air taxi dream was shiny, no doubt. Who doesn’t want to skip traffic, float above angry honking drivers, and arrive at work like James Bond? The promise was intoxicating:
Boom. Civilization leveled up.
Volocopter and Lilium rode that dream hard. They went to investors, waved futuristic drone images, and whispered sweet nothings like “urban air mobility” and “trillions in market size.” And investors, high on FOMO, threw cash like drunk sailors at a Vegas casino.
But here’s the kicker: building an app is easy. Building a plane that flies humans safely? Not so much.
Ah, Volocopter. The golden child that promised to showcase German engineering to the world.
Imagine the PR: athletes running on the ground, and above them? Flying taxis buzzing like giant futuristic bees.
But reality hit harder than a Lufthansa baggage fee.
Their IPO plans collapsed. Investors suddenly acted like they’d just sobered up after a wild party. Money dried up. Employees were laid off. Rumors spread: “Is Volocopter dying?”
But nah, not yet. Like every dramatic soap opera hero, they pulled a last-minute twist:
👉 Bridge financing.
(Which in startup language means: “We begged, we pleaded, and somehow convinced someone to keep us alive for now.”)
Volocopter is still alive, still flying demo models, and still promising Paris will see VoloCity in the skies. Will it happen? Stay tuned.
Then there’s Lilium, the other German daredevil.
Where Volocopter flirts with collapse, Lilium takes a different strategy: slash and survive.
They still promise a future:
And here’s their plot twist: Chinese partners. Because if there’s one country that loves ambitious transport ideas (and has cash to burn), it’s China.
So while Volocopter is busy trying not to drown, Lilium is basically saying:
“Fine, we’ll get rid of the fluff, tighten the belt, and go the distance.”
Respect. Brutal, but smart.
The whole flying taxi saga feels less like Silicon Valley and more like Survivor.
It’s like watching The Bachelor, but instead of roses, startups hand out pink slips.
Lesson?
Hype is easy. Execution is hard.
Flying taxis aren’t a bad idea. In fact, they’re kind of genius.
But here’s the unfun part:
This industry isn’t just about building drones. It’s about building trust, safety, infrastructure, and convincing people that flying above their neighbor’s house won’t crash like a cheap toy drone.
Volocopter and Lilium show the two extremes of startup survival:
Both are right. Both are wrong. And both show just how brutal the “future of transport” really is.
So what can startups, dreamers, and armchair CEOs like us learn?
So, will we see air taxis in our lifetime?
Yes. Probably. But maybe not by 2024. Or 2026. Or even 2027.
Startups dream big, but reality always checks the bill. The sky will belong to flying taxis one day — but the pioneers we see now? They may or may not be the ones who take us there.
Volocopter and Lilium gave us the first season of the flying taxi soap opera. Drama, heartbreak, hope, and survival. And whether they succeed or crash, one thing’s certain:
The dream of flying above traffic is too good to die.
Until then, keep your seatbelt fastened.
Wow, amazing blog layout! How long have you been blogging for? you make blogging look easy. The overall look of your site is fantastic, let alone the content!