The Testament of Sherlock Holmes

released on Sep 25, 2012

The Testament of Sherlock Holmes immerses you in 1898 London as you conduct an incredible investigation. All the evidence suggests our hero is the main suspect in a case involving theft, fraud and double-crossings. Unable to prove his own innocence, Holmes is rapidly losing London's trust as doubt spreads through the city like wildfire. Even Doctor Watson's faith in his friend begins to waver, as the famous detective flees Scotland Yard and raises further suspicion; prowling around at night, destruction of evidence... would Holmes go so far as to commit murder? The complex and decidedly-mature storyline surrounds a particularly tricky investigation, in which each and every puzzle will challenge both insight and wits! As Sherlock Holmes, you will use the detective's full repertoire: handle and inspect clues, reenact crimes and use the game's new deduction system to draw your own conclusions. Choose your questioning approach to catch characters off guard and gather valuable information. Face an open investigation, and decide which leads to follow and which to ignore.


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Found it frustrating and the game didn't age well.

I
Had
The time of my life
And I never felt this way before
And I swear
This is true
And I owe it all to you...

The Testament of Sherlock Holmes is essentially more of the same in the long line of Frogwares SH games. Spiritually though, it represents more than it first seems. Where the prior entries are clumsy but entertaining eurojank fan fiction, Testament contains within it the first clumsy steps of this series towards something greater. Here for the first time, the seeds of ambition are apparent. Just not very apparent.

The formula is almost identical. You alternate between playing as the titular sleuth and his loyal companion Watson, completing light point & click object based challenges interspersed with more traditional, isolated puzzles. Occasionally, in fact, far too infrequently, you're given some actual detective work. These deduction puzzles have always been the highlight of the early Frogwares Holmes games, and while Testament contains the least number of them so far (and probably the easiest ones), they play a lot smoother than before. The game is probably the easiest Sherlock game so far in general, the only occasions I looked up a walkthrough being because I'd missed some obscure UI element rather than anything to do with the content of the puzzles.

At the same time as the difficulty has been downplayed, the story has been streamlined too. The stakes are higher, familiar faces return, Sherlock is more of a dick than ever and in general it feels strangely close to the Guy Ritchie and RDJ Sherlock film released just a few years prior. It's not all action and explosions, not by a long shot, but the narrative feels more cinematic in a few ways. There's a strange in-media-res narrative device bookending the game, which serves little purpose other than to allow Frogwares the opportunity to crowbar in a nonsense twist at the end of the game and the cutscenes are more frequent than ever.

Testament's engine is creakier than ever, with the visuals barely improved from the Awakened six years prior. This only contributes to the sense of this game existing as a sort of swansong for this quadrilogy, or maybe more of a dying gasp. There's a sensation throughout that Frogwares can't wait to move on, to truly move the series forward in an interesting direction and that Testament exists only to tide the fanbase over till they could truly revolutionise their series in Crimes and Punishments. Does that make Testament a bad game? No, but it's not the series' best or most interesting. At the end of the day, Testament is one of the most fascinating things there is: A filler episode with too much ambition.

It's fine, it has better mechanics and visuals than previous games, story is alright, nothing fancy

Didn't enjoy it as much as Awakened, some parts genuinely frustrating, ending pretty much came out of nowhere and didn't feel like it really wrapped any of the story up.