The Cross-Examination
Surviving the questions
Opposing counsel circles your witness like a shark sensing blood. The questions come rapid-fire — designed to confuse, contradict, and break. Your objection hand is twitching.
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Part of this story
The Cross-Examination
→The opposing counsel is trying to break your witness. Navigate the rapid-fire questioning that tests your preparation and composure.
Part of the quest
Courtroom Composure
→The courtroom is a stage where every word, pause, and reaction matters. Master the opening statement, survive cross-examination, adapt to surprise rulings, and deliver a closing argument that lands. You'll navigate four escalating scenarios — from the opening statement to the closing argument — practicing the decisions that matter most when the pressure is real and the stakes are personal. This isn't theory. It's practice for the moments that define how this chapter of your life unfolds.
What you'll learn from The Cross-Examination
This scenario focuses on Surviving the questions — a critical skill inside the broader legal domain. You'll face a decision where the instinctive response is often the wrong one. After you make your choice, you'll see exactly what happened in the other person's head and why it mattered. The scenario is part of The Cross-Examination, a full interactive story inside the Courtroom Composure quest.
Skills you'll build in Courtroom Composure
More scenarios in this quest
What started with the cross-examination just got more complicated. Now you need to maintain composure under aggressive cross-examination without appearing evasive — and the situation is shifting faster than your first approach can handle.
This is the moment you've been building toward. Pivoting your strategy in real time when a judge rules against you unexpectedly — except now the stakes are real and there's no rehearsal. What you do next matters.
You've faced the hardest part. Now turn what you've learned into something sustainable — a way to maintain composure under aggressive cross-examination without appearing evasive not just today, but every time this situation returns.
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