“Assassination is the extreme form of censorship.” – George Bernard Shaw
“A changeling of politics and pixels, where one bullet rewrites history.” – Me, Ch3t
Political assassinations are the ultimate power-shift moments — in real life, they change the trajectory of nations. In video games, they become the pivot points for drama, strategy, and chaos. Whether you’re sneaking through shadows with a silenced pistol or orchestrating coups through dialogue trees, games have used assassination as a storytelling accelerant, a moral quagmire, and sometimes just a flashy boss fight. Let’s jack in and take a look at the top games where political assassination takes center stage.
1. Assassin’s Creed III (2012)

The Stage: Colonial America, Revolutionary Era
The Target: Political and military leaders tied to the Templars.
Ubisoft’s historical sandbox thrives on one thing: political murder. Assassin’s Creed III takes you into the heart of the American Revolution, where you as Connor Kenway infiltrate, stalk, and ultimately assassinate figures who influence the budding nation’s politics. It’s not just about slashing throats — it’s about reshaping the ideological DNA of a new country.
Cyberpunk note: These kills aren’t just personal, they’re systemic. Each target is a node in the network of power — cut them out, and the whole thing glitches.
2. Hitman (Series, 2000–Present)

The Stage: The globe — wherever money and power congregate.
The Target: Politicians, dictators, moguls.
Agent 47 doesn’t discriminate — but he sure loves a corrupt politician. Across the Hitman franchise, you’re tasked with eliminating world leaders, despots, and power brokers whose grip on politics is as toxic as their taste in expensive wine. These aren’t just assassinations; they’re balletic puzzles of timing, disguise, and execution.
Cyberpunk note: 47 is the ultimate contractor in a gig economy dystopia: a human drone, optimized for political murder as service work.
3. Dishonored (2012)

The Stage: Dunwall, a plague-ridden, steampunk dystopia.
The Target: The Empress’s killers and corrupt aristocracy.
In Dishonored, you play Corvo Attano, framed for the assassination of the Empress. The game’s entire arc is drenched in political assassination — both the one you’re accused of and the ones you commit on your path of revenge. Every political kill changes the city’s fate, plunging it further into chaos or carefully pruning corruption like a gardener with a very bloody pair of shears.
Cyberpunk note: Assassination here isn’t just a plot beat — it’s a philosophy. Every action reshapes the system, like rewriting the code of an empire.
4. Fallout: New Vegas (2010)

The Stage: The Mojave Wasteland, post-nuclear apocalypse.
The Target: Leaders of factions vying for dominance.
In New Vegas, politics is everything — a shifting desert of allegiances, betrayals, and power grabs. Depending on your choices, you can orchestrate the assassination of key political leaders, tipping the balance between Caesar’s Legion, the NCR, Mr. House, or your own rise to power. The bullets fired in these moments aren’t just executions — they’re the hinge of history in a fractured America.
Cyberpunk note: Assassination as democracy. In the wasteland, votes are cast in blood.
5. Deus Ex (2000)

The Stage: A cyberpunk future of shadow governments and corporate overlords.
The Target: Politicians, CEOs, and Illuminati agents.
This classic cyberpunk RPG is practically a masterclass in political assassination. JC Denton navigates a world of conspiracies, where powerful leaders and shadowy elites are just as vulnerable as any thug in the street. Whether by stealth, negotiation, or sniper rifle, you take down those pulling society’s strings. Every political hit brings you closer to unraveling who really controls the grid.
Cyberpunk note: This is assassination as revelation — each death is a ripped veil, exposing the architecture of control.