Sherlock Holmes: Chapter One review

Need to know

What is it? An open-world detective mystery with a young Sherlock. 

Expect to pay £40/$50

Developer Frogwares

Publisher Frogwares

Release November 16

Reviewed on GTX 1080 Ti, Intel i7-8086K, 16GB RAM

Multiplayer? No

Link Official site

Sherlock Holmes: Chapter One feels like the ultimate expression of developer Frogwares’ ambition for its venerable sleuthing series and, simultaneously, its strangest entry. It is nearly everything you could want from a game about the consulting detective, but also quite a few things that you could do without. It veers between greatness and absurdity, but if you’ve got an itch to solve some Victorian mysteries, there isn’t a better salve. 

Don’t let the title fool you—this is not the first in a series of episodic games, but rather an origin story. In The Devil’s Daughter, Frogwares transformed Sherlock Holmes into a brooding Jon Hamm look-alike, and here’s it’s doubled down, giving us a fresh-faced version of Sherlock who’s clearly just walked out of a CW Network drama—probably one of the vampire ones—complete with a pout and a penchant for leather gloves. 

Instead of being stuck in gloomy London, Sherlock’s taken a trip to the sunny Mediterranean island of Cordona, where he lived as a child, to visit his mother’s grave. There’s no fog, no army of urchins and no Watson; all of which, it turns out, is actually a good thing. Unshackled from so many of the conventions of a Sherlock Holmes mystery, Chapter One takes bold, surprising and, yes, sometimes quite silly turns, and miraculously does that within an adventure that still feels true to the game series and the broader fiction. 

(Image credit: Frogwares)

Sherlock’s constant companion, Jon, is a sort of proto-Watson, and really exemplifies how Chapter One adapts Arthur Conan Doyle’s ancient character. Like Watson, Jon is a sounding board, motivator and confidant for Sherlock, as well as assisting in his cases. But unlike the good doctor, he’s a bit of a rogue, with a playful, cheeky streak and a more fraternal relationship with Sherlock. He’s also entirely imaginary.

Head games

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