The Jury Experience in Columbus puts you in the juror’s seat, where your vote decides the outcome—pressure and consequence included.
You’ll step into a charged courtroom, listen closely, and feel your certainty wobble as new angles surface. Performers keep the tension taut while you measure motive against law, empathy against evidence. Each session stands alone, the cases fictional yet unnervingly plausible, and the decisions are made by you—collectively, transparently, decisively. Multiple cases are available, so you can return and test your principles again. No spoilers, no easy answers—just the rare chance to see how your judgment holds under heat.
What is on in Columbus?
Death on the Port Side
In The Jury Experience: Death on the Port Side, you step into a fictional courtroom where a late-night speedboat outing among friends ended with one dead and another in a coma. The accused—the child of a powerful politician—insists it was a tragic misread of speed and light; others remember bravado, slurred timelines, and flares of temper. Listen closely. Under the hum of privilege and the fog of unreliable memory, testimony pulls both ways, and even remorse feels strategic. Was it accident or intent? You weigh credibility, mood, and motive—aware that certainty keeps slipping just out of reach.
What Is The Jury Experience?
The Jury Experience is an immersive courtroom event where you serve as juror and vote on a verdict. It centers audience participation, live voting, and the moral and psychological tension of deciding under pressure. Expect multiple rotating cases, strong replayability, and professional performances across a 60–75 minute runtime. All trials are fictional and standalone, so you can join any night, in any order; recommended for ages 12+.
Evidence arrives in fragments, and you stitch it into a story that feels true enough to carry. Doubt lingers, but you choose anyway, because not choosing is a choice of its own. In the hush before the verdict, responsibility shifts from abstract to personal—and stays with you long after the room exhales.

