This is a big step, but before Volocopter can offer commercial rides, it will have to build take-off and landing infrastructure and integrate into air traffic management systems. In the meantime, it will use its current 2X pre-series model to conduct public test flights, like the one scheduled in Singapore later this year. We've already seen Volocopter in action, thanks to tests in Dubai in 2017 and at CES in Las Vegas in 2018.

The company has come a long way since 2011, when it conducted the first manned eVTOL flight. At the time, that aircraft looked like an exercise ball with rotors strapped to it. Volocopter previously said it wanted to have air taxis in the sky in five years, by 2023. With VoloCity, it appears to be on track to meet that goal.