London in VGA: finding the real Sherlock Holmes behind The Case Of The Serrated Scalpel

Channel:
Subscribers:
5,600
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t1qlwLPH2EM



Game:
Sherlock (1984)
Category:
Let's Play
Duration: 26:57
1,067 views
113


The Lost Files of Sherlock Holmes: The Case of the Serrated Scalpel is a great game. But who was Sherlock Holmes? How much does his London overlap with the real London? Is this even slightly about video games any more?

Yes, we've gone high-concept with a background of traffic noise as I attempt to master detect the master detective himself. Plus my studio is still out of action and I kind of wanted a day trip.

Case Files:

0:00 221B or not 221B
1:35 Oh yeah, video games
2:01 Tangential detail
2:58 The game is afoot
4:46 An ideal character
6:02 Holmes 2.0
7:43 A problem with the real world
10:26 The classic Holmes setup
11:53 Cold reading
13:58 Another location
15:54 Immediate roadblock
17:08 Scathing reviews
18:31 Holmes 1.0
20:21 A bit of flavour
22:09 Watson the goffik
23:12 Yards Scotland
24:44 Sour reviewers
25:38 Holmes' admiring public

Stock footage from Pexels
Huge amounts of public domain imagery from Wikimedia Commons
Dr. Joseph Bell, 'The Daily Round'. Wellcome L0001109.jpg, CC-BY 4.0

PC Zone scan provided by the Retro eXo project.

Every attempt has been made to ensure book images, Sidney Paget illustrations and other Sherlock miscellanea has been taken from images stated to be in the public domain. If you believe this to be in error please contact me and I will try to rectify and credit appropriately.

CC-BY 4.0: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Bonus fact: While the game may be approximate, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle moved his medical practice to London in 1891 and many of the Sherlock stories were written while he lived in South Norwood, meaning that many of the locations in the books were based on real-world places, although sometimes disguised with a slight name change as in the case of "Caulfield Gardens"

#pointandclick #adventuregame




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Tags:
retrogaming
dos
point'n'click
point and click
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Electronic Arts
Victorian London
Non-Victorian London
Mythos Software
Probably the shark-jumping moment
I did enjoy that beer though



Other Statistics

Sherlock Statistics For TimberwolfK

TimberwolfK presently has 1,067 views for Sherlock across 1 video, with his channel publishing less than an hour of Sherlock content. This makes up less than 0.83% of the total overall content on TimberwolfK's YouTube channel.