As police chief, you can deploy tear gas to disperse a violent protest at a hospital entrance, risking harm to patients, or hold the line and risk staff being attacked. What do you do?
The Anti‑Vax Parent
A measles outbreak erupts. As a judge, you can order forced vaccination of children against parental consent in one district. It will save lives but set a sweeping precedent. Do you sign the order?
The Jury Nullifier
As foreperson, you believe the law is unjust though the defendant is guilty. A conviction will deport their family; an acquittal frees a dangerous trend. Do you nullify the law?
The Executioner’s Mercy
As a prison doctor, you’re ordered to certify a botched execution as ‘complete’ to avoid public scandal. The prisoner is alive but brain‑damaged. Do you sign?
The Guilty Brother
Your brother confesses to a murder. The wrong person has been arrested. Do you turn him in?
The Prison Guard’s Choice
A riot breaks out. You can save one group of inmates — one is violent criminals, the other is vulnerable first-time offenders. Who do you choose?
The Life Sentence
You’re a juror in a case where the evidence is shaky but public pressure is intense. Acquitting could free a dangerous criminal; convicting could jail an innocent. What’s your verdict?
The False Alibi
A loved one begs you to give them a false alibi for a crime you’re certain they committed. Without your help, they’ll face life in prison. Do you lie?
The Fake Testimony
The police ask you to lie in court to convict a dangerous criminal. Do you commit perjury for the greater good?
The Parole Board
As a parole board member, you must decide if a reformed murderer is truly safe to release. One wrong call could mean another death. Do you grant freedom?
The Jury Saboteur
You’re on a jury and believe the accused is guilty, but the evidence is weak and the law says you must acquit. Do you vote against your conscience?
The Silent Witness
You witness a friend commit a minor crime that spirals into a tragedy. Speaking up could prevent future harm but will ruin them now. Do you break your silence?
The Innocent Prisoner
You have evidence that could free an innocent man who’s been in prison for 20 years, but revealing it would incriminate your own parent for the original crime. Do you save the man or protect your parent?
The Ransom Demand
Cybercriminals lock your company’s data and demand a ransom. Paying will save jobs but fund further crimes. Do you pay?
The Vigilante Plan
A friend plans to attack someone you both believe committed a crime but escaped justice. Stopping them means betraying their trust; letting them proceed could make you an accessory. What do you do?
The Jury Lie
You’re on a jury and believe the accused is guilty, but the evidence is weak. The other jurors want to acquit. Do you lie during deliberations to secure a guilty verdict?
The Library Ban
The council proposes banning certain books from the public library after complaints. Supporting the ban protects some readers; rejecting it protects free access. Which side are you on?
The Anonymous Tip
You witness a hit-and-run from your window and captured the plate number. Reporting it could involve you in court; staying quiet leaves the victim without justice. Do you call the police?