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Simulations are Model Diplomat’s MUN practice mode. You join a simulated UN committee as a delegate representing a specific country, and you debate with AI-powered delegates representing other countries — all in real time. It’s the closest thing to a real MUN committee that you can do from your laptop.

What simulations do

In a simulation:
  • You’re assigned (or choose) a country to represent
  • AI delegates represent all other countries in the committee
  • A chair (also AI) runs the session with real parliamentary procedure
  • You give speeches, respond to points of information, make motions, and negotiate
  • At the end, you receive a score and skills assessment grading your performance

Why simulations matter for MUN prep

Reading about MUN procedure is very different from actually doing it. Simulations give you: Procedural fluency — You practice using the right motions at the right time, in a realistic setting where making an error has consequences (the AI chair will rule you out of order). Negotiation practice — You have to actually persuade AI delegates to support your position. You can’t just say you’ll negotiate — you have to do it. Speaking under pressure — Drafting and delivering speeches with other delegates in the “room” is different from writing them alone. Simulations build the muscle memory of thinking and speaking diplomatically in real time. Safe failure — You can make all your mistakes in simulations before you’re in a real committee. Try the aggressive strategy, see if it works, learn what to do differently.

Getting started

Go to Simulations in the left sidebar to see the full list of available scenarios. Click any simulation to read its description, difficulty level, and objectives before you start.

How to run a simulation

Step-by-step guide to starting and completing a simulation

Simulation types

Historical, current affairs, and fictional scenarios explained

Scoring & skills

How your performance is assessed and what the scores mean