The Jury Experience in Kingston is an immersive courtroom event where you take the juror’s seat and the final verdict rests with you. Here’s why people in cities across the world have been flocking to this experience.
From the hush before the first witness to the weight of your final vote, you’re pulled into questions that won’t settle easily. How do you judge intent? What does justice look like when facts collide with feeling? With multiple cases to try across different sessions, each night invites a new moral maze—no spoilers, just pressure, doubt, and the charge of deciding what’s right.
What is on in Kingston?
Death by AI: Who Pays the Price?
You’re seated for a wrongful death trial born from a fatal collision involving autonomous driving tech. The car did what it was designed to do—until it didn’t. A life is lost; the system followed its code. So who shoulders the blame: the developer, the vehicle’s operator, the company that deployed it, regulators, or no one at all? Expect uneasy testimony, clinical data that chills, and arguments that twist familiar ideas of intent and control. In this fictional case, certainty slips and responsibility blurs, leaving you to decide where accountability ends—and where it must begin.
What Is The Jury Experience?
The Jury Experience is a live, fictional courtroom event where you become a juror. You’ll hear testimony, weigh evidence, and vote—your decision shapes the outcome. Designed for audience participation and collective decision-making, it heightens moral and psychological tension. With multiple standalone cases, strong replayability, and professional performances, each 60–75 minute session stands on its own. All trials are fictional and recommended for ages 12+.
Evidence rarely speaks in one voice. You weigh facts against instinct, testimony against doubt, and somewhere between procedure and conscience, a verdict takes shape. It’s uncomfortable, necessary, and unmistakably yours. The responsibility doesn’t lift when the gavel falls—it lingers, asking what justice should feel like when certainty isn’t guaranteed.


