Kaori is introduced as a taxi driver working for the remote Kita-Ni Daisuke taxi company in Hokkaido. She is quiet, reserved, and carries the heavy burden of her brother’s infamy. Living in a small apartment above a soba shop, she has distanced herself from the yakuza world entirely, trying to build an honest life through grueling night shifts driving a cab through blizzards. Kaori’s story is intrinsically tied to Taiga Saejima’s redemption. After escaping from prison (again) and arriving in the cold north to fulfill a promise to his late patriarch, Taiga seeks out his sister. Their reunion is not a joyful one. It is awkward, painful, and realistic. The Taxi Driver and the Hitman Initially, Kaori rejects Taiga. She has spent years hiding from the stigma of being "the sister of a mass murderer." She works a blue-collar job, endures the gossip of locals, and has built a fragile peace. The arrival of her brother threatens to shatter that peace.
Kaori has not appeared in a major role since Yakuza 5 (though she is referenced in Yakuza 6 briefly). However, her absence is felt. She represents an era of Yakuza storytelling that dared to slow down. In a game filled with mahjong parlors, batting cages, and street brawls, Kaori’s storyline asked players to sit in a cold taxi and listen to the wind. kaori saejima
In a franchise obsessed with honor and violence, Kaori chooses neither. She chooses a steering wheel, a frozen road, and survival. She is the unsung heart of the Saejima legend—the sister who drove through the night so her brother could see the dawn. Kaori is introduced as a taxi driver working