You're probably best off hooking into one of the scripting interfaces that Debian has for their various package tools and writing your own simulator.
(Edit: I can't find dpkg-perl and dpkg-python anymore. dpkg-awk and dpkg-ruby exist, but they don't look like they'll do the job.)
However: Debian has a tool "equivs" that lets you build "empty" packages that just satisfy dependencies, but install no files beyond the control files. http://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=equivs
dpkg and apt-get both have options to run with different administration and root directories. The dpkg man page has them, but the apt-get one is buried in apt.conf.
DIRECTORIES
The configuration item RootDir has a special meaning. ...
aptitude lets you pick and choose what to install, and then "commits" it by running dpkg and/or apt with the right settings. Playing around with it might be sufficient for some of your needs, though you'll want to save the settings before hand, and restore afterword.
