Most video games ask you to save the world, conquer territories, or outrace opponents. JFK Reloaded , released in 2004 by Scottish developer Traffic Games, asked you to do something far more uncomfortable: recreate the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. And yes, there was a Mac version.

Traffic Games’ original manifesto (archived), Simulation & Society (2022), and the JFK Lancer forums’ legendary 2005 thread on “digital forensics vs. entertainment.” Would you run a copy if you could find one? Or should some history remain un-playable?

On the surface, JFK Reloaded is a ballistics simulator. You assume the role of Lee Harvey Oswald (or, more neutrally, “a shooter”) from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository. Your goal isn’t gore—it’s precision . The game scores you on how closely your shot pattern matches the Warren Commission’s findings: three shots, two hits on Kennedy, one miss. A green wireframe ghost of the presidential limousine moves through Dealey Plaza. You aim, account for bullet drop and target lead, and fire. Afterward, a forensic overlay shows wound trajectories, bullet fragmentation, and whether your timing aligns with the famous Zapruder film.