Can painter raise the dancing cloud the feet light y’all give me or can pain the dancing clown notice where you could tesy Mikami without even touching the death note note
With the slightest clue Sherlock gets, Light would have a 99% chance of being caught... The DN characters are brilliant. But Holmes is a monster. Even in fiction, hardly anyone can match his reasoning ability...
Nah I swear to god, for those who don’t know: When Sherlock Holmes first met Watson: he deducted that Watson was coming from a war in Afghanistan as a medic and was extremely sick in a few seconds by seeing on him: dirt and bad posture or some trivial BS. He’s a beast
Sherlock's issue is if Kira learned he was being hunted by Sherlock Holmes it would be much easier to kill him with the notebook, I doubt it would be nearly as difficult for Kira to dig up Sherlock's full name and jot him down compared to Bats and L.
But if Sherlock Holmes is this big famous detective, light would just look him up and kill him as soon as he found out he was being investigated by some famous detective from London since there isn't many of them. He might just blackmail the politicians like he did to get the FBI to back down in the anime.
@@ΑΡΙΣΤΟΤΕΛΗΣΛΑΧΑΝΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ L revealed himself to show that he had tricked Kira and to prove, in public, that Kira can't kill anybody. Sherlock would also need to find in which city Kira is so he would reveal himself. perhaps not his real name but Sherlock doesn't hide himself as much as L (who nobody knows his real name or has seen his picture)
@@WilliamWizer Sherlock would probably deduce Kira kills just using names, so he wouldn't openly reveal he's investigating him. He would have to confirm his region yes, but he'd likely find a less direct way to do so.
Holy crap, I genuinely didn't know how big brain Sherlock was. Sure, I already knew that he was an absolutely amazing detective, but I didn't know that he could do things like this. 14:44
my favorite moment in Sherlock uk was when he deciphered that picture of numbers as a 747 plane, named the airport and a time range in a matter of seconds.
also, in that exact scene (ive watched it) there was technology at the time but there wasnt any time to search it up. also sherlock knew NOTHING about space and the stars. watson evennsaid afterwards it wouldve helped a lot if he knew.
Kind of unrelated,but the other reason I like Sherlock besides his amazing reasoning ability,is that he can literally fight 😅 Like a wrestling match,against a price fighter.
I think most other fictional geniuses could probably beat Light, because the whole point of "Death Note" is that despite being geniuses, Light and L are ultimately a couple of immature, borderline-insane manchildren who are, deep down, more concerned about playing a game with each other than actually accomplishing either of their goals. Light didn't have to kill Lind L. Tailor, he could have easily ignored the taunting and never revealed his location. Similarly, L didn't have to bait and provoke Kira after Tailor was killed, he could have said nothing more, cut the broadcast, and simply shared his findings with the police. That first scene is brilliant for many reasons, but one of which is that it simultaneously shows off Light and L's shared flaw that got them both killed: Their pride. Light especially constantly lets his anger and ego get the best of him, and there are several points in the story where he could have easily won if he had just calmed the hell down, realistically looked at his limitations, and thought about it longer. It's story about hubris, about a young man who was told his whole life that he was special and destined for great things and how this coddling ultimately ruined him the second he got a small taste of real power.
The larger issue that Death Note has in writing its geniuses is that it writes out their thought processes while most fiction writers just say "they innately know something they really shouldn't because they're just so smart." L is written with a level of genius where he has realistic human limitations on what he can reason out. If someone was shot in an alleyway he couldn't sniff the air and say, "The victim was shot with this model of gun, at precisely this time, fired from this height," etc. because that sort of writing is asinine but it's unfortunately how a lot of writers do things. While L didn't need to reveal that he fooled Kira with the Lind L Taylor scheme, it actually was the better move in the long run. Since Kira was also hunting down L, trying to find his name and face, it led to many of Light's further mistakes. Light's use of police records was done specifically as a means of him taking an offensive strategy against L and that's what caused him to be tracked by Raye Pember which would ultimately cause a ton of trouble for him down the road. But none of that happens if L doesn't tell Light, "I fooled you and I'm hunting you down." Light would have simply continued regular Kira killings. Remember that by the broadcast plan, all it really proved was that Kira existed, could kill from a remote distance with minimal information, and was in Kanto at the time of the broadcast, not any particular information about his personal life, or how his power worked. The same goes for the suicide notes that led to the theory that Kira has some influence over a person's actions prior to their death. He wouldn't have given L that if he wasn't trying to taunt him, he would have done his experimentation in a more subtle way. Light's response to being taunted by L is what led to him making decisions that were rational for Light (his goal being to take out L ASAP rather than simply avoid being caught) but since he was being more offensive he also gave more information than he would via his normal Kira activity. Even if you did the same broadcast plan, unless you got more information shortly after it, you can't be definitively certain that Kira didn't simply leave Kanto shortly after it happened. You could "assume" that to be the case but you can never be certain. And you certainly can't narrow it down to someone who has access to police records.
@Zetact_ ya, that's the problem with other detectives, their senses, reasoning ability, and knowledge are inherently inhuman. Some detectives have senses like a bloodhound like you stated, or have the intelligence of a God like batman who is 'supposedly ' an ordinary man. When you right out the actual thought process of the detective, you actually have to have a way for them to deduce information. That is why L and Light's battle of wits was unique, they're both human but the author explained how both of them thought out each situation. Not randomly discovering things like other detective stories
"You could "assume" that to be the case but you can never be certain." Well yes, but it's the most reasonable working theory, otherwise you'd have nothing to go on. And nothing came up to disprove the theory. I think L could reasonably have gleaned even more information remotely by controlling the police records and areas to which the police records were sent, engineering fake blackouts, and varying high school student curfew times (which would be a way of confirming/eliminating the high school hypothesis). L shouldn't have revealed himself on the broadcast -- given a week of regular Kira killings you could reasonably narrow it down to one or two neighbourhoods in the Kanto region, and if you had extra investigations on the side eg. through tracking internet traffic that would be enough information to narrow it down to a small pool of suspects. And of course Light being the police chief's son would make him stand out.
sherlock holmes would pull up to light’s house, sniff his pillow, feel his tv screen, taste his chips, and immediately know everything light has done since the fourth grade
Not the biggest Holmes fan, so when I saw the title I thought, "It would depend on what he knows about supernatural events." Sure enough, he's dealt with ghosts. Then it was a slam dunk in my opinion. Light's problems dealing with detectives in general is their vast experience compared to his, he has to reason his way through everything, since the entire situation is new to him. An old hand like Batman or Holmes would make short work of him. L had three major stumbling blocks: 1) no idea about the supernatural, 2) desire to form a friendship, and 3) his idiosyncratic ideas about winning. Near could win because L's investigation took care of (1) and he had no care at all for (2). (3) still hung him up, as the competition with Mello. But I digress. Holmes really had none of these three flaws and would likely solve it straightforwardly. Great video.
Big thing I want to respond to L didn't want to form a friendship with anyone, and often thought little of those around him. He called Light a friend as a manipulation tactic, in reality he hated Light's guts
I have a problem with a couple of these. 1. L didn't care on making friends with Light, that was just to mess with him. 2. Near had to start from scratch when approaching the Kira case. All he knew was that Kira killed L, that was it. This can be explained easily by the fact Watari deleted all of the files, and the Near was unaware of the scene between Light, Misa, and Light's father pretending to shoot his son. 3. I believe Sherlock is indeed a better detective, but L's knowledge is more expansive than Sherlock's, given that Sherlock refuses to learn things that he deems unimportant, even politics. L has high expertise in the economy, stocks, politics, etc. He's like a mixture of Sherlock and Mycroft. But otherwise, I agree with you.
@@katz7609 On point three he explains his reasoning for being selective with what he knows. He does so as not to muddle his thought process and having unnecessary information to cloud his own judgement. He does recall all the information he has learned throughout the series. Even in the SH games he keeps a vast archive in his apartment.
The only chance Light has is to get Sherlock before Sherlock knows the name and face requirements. Sherlock has enough talent and influence to wipe himself off any public database as long as he knows a name and face are required. If he doesn’t learn that until after meeting Light and saying his name, that’s a solid GG in Light’s favor
the issue there is sherlock is famous. light would know of his existence and the anime would change to that too. before L challenged light, light didnt know he existed. sherlock doesnt have the element of surprise here and his win condition makes it so he cant win. he either works with the police and light notices somethings off or he follows light without the cops first ryuk tells him and shit hits the fan for sherlock there.
@@tfordham13 if shits just starting its even easier for light as it becomes near impossible to account for the deathnote unless sherlock already has experience with it. sherlock cant work with the cops as he gets filed in even if with an alias hes the odd man out and sticks our like a sore thumb. if not he can never get the evidence needed to convict light legally making it not able to be used in court
@@offline2807 Sherlock is only famous IRL. In the fictional world, it would depend on which stage of his career he's on and whether or not he's featured in the news or the media (sometimes the police don't want to embarrass themselves, and Sherlock doesn't chase fame, so the credit for solving his cases may go to Gregson or Lestrade). Even then, his fame would be confined to the United Kingdom, and to even start researching into that, Light would need to know that Sherlock is on his case, which he wouldn't, since unlike L, Sherlock would not announce it publicly and would work with the Japanese police under a fake name.
@@Lernos1 1 the dude even says in the video light is aware of sherlocks existence 2 since this is the case light is knowledgeable on sherlocks cases. Meaning he knows this is the kind of case sherlock would take. 3 as i have said before in other responses even with an alias he would be the odd one out on the task force or working with the task force seeing as he isnt L and doesnt seem to have global backing or the ability to just hide his name behind something like the title of "L" so to work with the cops he ends up in the system 4 If sherlock doesnt work with the police he cant win anyways. there would be no way to legally get the proof required for a conviction.
Sherlock: These murders are seemingly random, one criminal there the other criminal over there, the only two things these all have in common is they are all criminals being murdered and they are all publicly known figures. At least they were at the start, and recently even criminals unknown to public have been executed. I conclude that our murderer, dear Watson, first started doing this... business... by observing the names of his victims on the news, but then somehow got access to police files. "That seems logical.", I replied to my friend but I knew there was more to his reasoning he was not revealing. Sherlock: I was never a believer in the supernatural, dear Watson. Yet I can not explain this Kira fellow's power that stretches over vast distances. If we are dealing with the supernatural, then it would not be out of the question that this man, or a woman, would gain some sort of mystic knowledge. Yet it seems his knowledge is limited. I went through it with Interpol, and most of his recent victims were from the police files one would get locally in Japan. So it is quite obviously a person living in Japan, with connections to Japanese police, who started dispending his strange version of justice. "That narrows it down a lot, Sherlock!", I shouted. Sherlock: It does, doesn't it? I do hear footsteps and these should be our friends from Japanese police force coming to discuss our case. Ten men entered the room, and among them one particularly stood out, a handsome young man, much younger than the rest, with eyes as sharp as my friend's. Sherlock: I am glad that you all agreed to meet me here, in this international effort. I must say, I am without a clue and do not know how to stop Kira. They had a long talk, and the young man was revealed to be the son of the police chief in Japan. He was sort of an intellectual prodigy back home and was helping his father solve the case. His name being even more unusual than Sherlock's, as he is called Light. After the talk between these gentlemen was over, Holmes went and shook each man's hand. But when he reached for Light's hand, he put on the handcuffs on both of Light's hands with lightning quickness. "What is the meaning of this?!", almost everyone shouted at the same time at my friend. Sherlock: The meaning is... this is your Kira. He leaned on the desk and took out his pipe, which he quickly lighted. After he inhaled one smoke and exhaled it, he pointed his pipe at Light. Sherlock: Do you want to explain to everyone why you did what you did? And how you did it? Because not even I know that. Light: This is preposterous! Sherlock: Then allow me, in the inner lining pocket of his jacket you will find a small book most likely containing the names of all of his victims. I have noticed a small bulge on his jacket that should fit the size of a medium notebook we are searching for. I have also noticed the blisters on this young man's hand that would come from someone spending a lot of time, lets say writing names in a notebook. The police officers indeed searched Light, and took out a small black notebook. As they went through it, they indeed found the names of all of Light's victims. Light: This is ridiculous! You believe I am the Kira just because of some notebook? I was helping to solve the case so of course I would keep notes there... Sherlock: You might wonder how I came to these conclusions? Well, it took a lot of deaths before I did. We kept feeding different files to different police departments. Some had pictures of criminals and some had names. I soon realized you would need both the picture and the name of the person for your mysterious powers to work. By sending different types of files to different parts of Japan I was soon able to locate you right to the exact police station. Then I realized one other thing. Sometimes murders would happen one after another with a slight delay. Why the delay I wondered? What was it that you had to do for the murders to happen? If you could kill people using your thoughts then there would be no delay. The delay would be only the time for you to read the name. Was it some chanting you had to do, magical words? Then I did another test, I sent some poor victims with long names, some with short names. Interestingly enough, those with short names had a shorter delay. "He was writing their names in the book!", I shouted. Sherlock: Well, yes, I was coming to that. But it could have been that the boy was speaking the names. However I solved that by sending some same sounding names with slightly different spelling. I deducted he was writing the names. I compared the speeds and times it would take for someone to write the names I was sending with the delay between the murders and I knew someone was using a certain type of pen and paper for the delay to be just right. Well, here we are now. That book has supernatural powers and to test it we won't kill a human but the member of the canine species. I will be the one to write the poor dog's name in the book and I do know the dog's face. He is an old dog, and his time is about right to go. Light: You can't! You won't get away with this! I am the God of this world! Sherlock: Not when your writing hands are tied, obviously. My name is Holmes by the way. Sherlock Holmes.
Only thing missing is lestrade and gregson taking credit. Mycroft having a talk with the Japanese delegation about the fallout of Kira and Sherlock with a medal the next day.
Misa Amane being arrested. New laws making the agencies all over the globe start to search for other notebooks of that nature. Perhaps Moriarty trying to get a hold of them or sell fakes
@@lupohutchington269 And Sherlock immediately burning the book after it is proven it works while British and Japanese agents tried to take it to their governments.
Sherlock Holmes: The Kira Case Scene: 1 - Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson were ensconced within their legendary office on Baker Street when Inspector Lestrade, a high-ranking detective in the London police force, burst in with an air of urgency. Inspector Lestrade: Sherlock Holmes, I am greatly relieved to find you at this juncture. We find ourselves embroiled in a most intriguing case, and I implore your sagacity and acumen to aid us. Sherlock Holmes: Forgive my interruption, Inspector Lestrade. Before you proceed, may I deduce the nature of this case? Your countenance and urgency lead me to surmise that it involves a matter of grave consequence. Inspector Lestrade, slightly taken aback by Holmes' interruption, nodded in agreement. Inspector Lestrade: Indeed, Holmes. Your intuition serves you well. We are faced with a perplexing series of incidents involving sudden and inexplicable cardiac arrests. The victims, as far as we can ascertain, are known criminals. The cause behind these mysterious deaths eludes us. Sherlock Holmes: Ah, the game is afoot! These circumstances are quite intriguing, Inspector. A string of cardiac arrests afflicting known criminals raises several pertinent questions. Are there any commonalities among the victims? Are there external factors at play that manipulate their cardiac systems? Inspector Lestrade: Your deductions, Holmes, are indeed astute. In recent days, this individuals are from various walks of life and have met their demise through this unexplained fate. Without exception, have no history of health issues or any other plausible cause that could account for their sudden deaths. Sherlock Holmes: Fascinating, Inspector Lestrade. The fact that these individuals hail from different regions and backgrounds, yet share a common fate, is indeed intriguing. Please indulge me further. Can you provide a breakdown of the regions from which they originated? Inspector Lestrade: Certainly, Holmes. The victims span various cities and countries, with a concentration of cases centered around London. Two of the deceased were notorious criminals who operated within the confines of our fair city. The remaining victims were scattered across different localities outside the United Kingdom. Some hailed from the bustling streets of New York City, while others were involved in criminal enterprises in Paris and Tokyo. Sherlock Holmes, absorbing the information with a keen focus, allowed his mind to delve into the depths of his extensive knowledge and experience. Sherlock Holmes: Remarkable, Lestrade. We are dealing with a web of criminal activity that spans borders, a tapestry woven by the darkest elements of society. It seems that these targeted individuals were all prominent figures within the criminal underworld, notorious for their malevolence and heinous acts. Sherlock Holmes: Inspector... might you enlighten me as to the total number of victims in this case? How many lives have been claimed thus far? Inspector Lestrade: We have documented a total of 37 victims over the course of two days. The first day saw 14 unfortunate souls perish, followed by 23 more on the subsequent day, which happens to be today. And interestingly enough, among the victims just now, were the notorious criminals i talked about, James "The Razor" Reynolds and Isabel "Black Widow" Thompson. Sherlock Holmes paused for a moment, his mind working through the details and connections. Sherlock Holmes: It appears that this organization, or individual, is driven by a vigilante-like motivation. Their actions suggest a skewed sense of justice, perhaps rooted in a simplistic understanding of right and wrong. It is as if they are playing the role of judge and executioner, targeting criminals whom they believe deserve punishment. Dr. Watson listened attentively, aware of Holmes' ability to unravel complex motivations and patterns. Dr. Watson: So, you believe this perpetrator is acting as a self-proclaimed arbiter of justice, taking it upon themselves to mete out punishment to those they deem guilty? Sherlock Holmes: Precisely, Watson. Their method of using cardiac arrests as a means of execution is both calculated and symbolic. It serves as a statement, a message to the criminal underworld that their reign of terror will not go unpunished. Dr. Watson: But who could possess such power and resources to orchestrate these targeted attacks? And why now? Sherlock Holmes absorbed by information, his mind racing to discern the significance of those death numbers. Sherlock Holmes: What can you tell me about the interval between these deaths? Is there a discernible pattern? Inspector Lestrade: The interval between each death is staggeringly short, Holmes. Merely a matter of seconds, ranging from 10 to 40 seconds between each fatal occurrence. Sherlock Holmes: It is a grave mistake to make assumptions based on incomplete information, but alas, the pursuit of truth often demands that we act with limited knowledge. Very well, Inspector Lestrade, I shall take up this case and devote my faculties to unraveling its intricate web of secrets. However, I implore you to provide me with every detail at your disposal. I need a comprehensive understanding of these victims, their criminal pasts, and any connections they may have had with each other. Furthermore, I request access to any pertinent evidence and witness testimonies that could shed light on the enigma we face. And gather information too on whether these criminals were indeed exposed to the public eye, whether through media coverage, court proceedings, or any other means. It is of utmost importance to ascertain whether their identities were widely known, for it could provide valuable insight into the workings of our elusive perpetrator. Inspector Lestrade, taking note of Holmes' request, nodded in agreement and made a mental note to collect the necessary information. Inspector Lestrade: I shall task my team with delving into the public records and media archives to determine the extent of exposure these individuals had. If they were indeed widely recognized, it may serve as a clue to the motivation behind these killings. Sherlock Holmes: Excellent, Inspector. Furthermore, I urge you to search our archives for any past cases involving similar patterns of strange and unexplained deaths. We must ascertain if there are any precedents or recurring themes that may shed light on our current investigation. Inspector Lestrade hastily made his way out of the room, leaving Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson to observe the flurry of activity around them. As they stood there, Sherlock couldn't resist making a witty remark. Sherlock Holmes: Ah, Watson, the chaos that ensues when mysteries unfold! It's quite reminiscent of a circus, wouldn't you agree? Dr. Watson chuckled at Sherlock's comment, appreciating his ability to find amusement even in the most perplexing situations. But then, Watson raised a question that had been lingering in his mind. Dr. Watson: Sherlock, do you think there's a possibility that the supernatural is at play here? Could there be forces beyond our comprehension guiding these events? Sherlock Holmes, drawing from his vast repertoire of cases and experiences, responded with his usual skepticism, grounded in logic and reason. Sherlock Holmes: Watson, my dear friend, I have encountered numerous cases in my career where the appearance of the supernatural was nothing more than a cleverly crafted illusion or a product of human ingenuity. From the Hound of the Baskervilles to the Speckled Band, I have unraveled the mysteries behind these seemingly otherworldly occurrences. In every instance, there was a rational explanation, grounded in the realm of the natural. Dr. Watson observed the discourse between Holmes and him. Their mind brimming with anticipation as they prepared to embark on an arduous journey through the murky realms of enigma. With unwavering trust in their partnership and unwavering belief in Holmes' singular brilliance, he stood ready to lend his unwavering support in the quest for truth. silence................... .....then Sherlock Holmes: Well... let us proceed under the assumption that our adversaries are human, driven by a peculiar notion of right and wrong, perhaps in their youthful and erratic pursuit of justice. If they are indeed vigilantes, they may be prone to leaving behind traces of their actions. Now, let us consider the second option, the wrath of a god upon this wretched world. If such a supernatural force were at play, I fear our endeavors may be in vain. After all, how can mortal minds comprehend the whims and motives of an entity beyond our realm? In the face of such power, our deductions and investigations may prove futile. And yet, even as the end looms before us, Watson, let us not forget to savor the present moment. Before the world succumbs to its inevitable demise, I propose we indulge in one of my favorite hobbies, the art of playing the violin. There's nothing quite like the soothing melodies to accompany us in these uncertain times. With a smile and a touch of irony, Sherlock Holmes set aside the weight of their impending doom and reached for his beloved instrument, ready to play a haunting tune that echoed the enigma of their situation. As the final notes lingered in the air, the scene came to a close, leaving behind an air of melancholic anticipation for the unknown that lay ahead.
I listened to the original Sherlock Holms books (because audiobooks), so I know for a fact that Sherlock would consider it a win if he killed Light (or if Light killed himself), so long as he had sufficient evidence to know Light was guilty. He would PREFER to have Light tried and convicted in a court of law, but Sherlock is more than willing to get his hands dirty if necessary. Just ask Professor Moriarty
As it should be. Sherlock the greatest detective of all fiction. May have to disagree on you with this but L has to wear a dunce cap if he’s in the same room as Holmes. Love them both but there’s no denying it.
@@thephoenix4093 you know about the time Batman sought help from Sherlock? Sherlock solved it faster than Batman with no effort at all. And the other detectives of fiction out there do not stand a chance against Sherlock. You might say Hercule Poirot but that man uses his gut feeling most of the time.
@@detectiveemilio3416 you do realize that batman and Sherlock are not in the same universe... However i do remember he once asked help from the question but batman never met Sherlock although as a child he read books about him.
You need to read Sherlock Holmes a study in scarlet. In the book, Sherlock Holmes already knows who the murderer is in the case. He knew before anyone else did, much like the guy you’re talking ab, Sherlock didn’t catch him bc he was trying to have fun. He then said he did know who the guy was because lastrade, Gregson and Watson told him to say who the murderer is, or more people will die. The entire book, ever since Sherlock got on the case, he knew who the murderer was. He knew the murderer was,(spoiler alert, in case anyone wants to read the book for themselves.) it was the taxi driver. He was just having fun with the case, but he also just needed the evidence, which he got in the end of the story.
@@tshegomokobodi7507 yes but my argument was that L wasn’t much smarter like the guy in the video said. He said L was smarter bc he knew the entire time. Sherlock did the same thing tho in Study in Scarlet.
@@swagmasterr6862 yeah I kinda stopped caring when I saw the thing about Sherlock deducing a password by thinking about it since that's just magic and nothing else
@@tshegomokobodi7507 The writers in that show particularly don't know how to write smart characters. It's hard for dumb people to write smart characters, so they kind of just give him magic intuition. I think there was a case where a man was lying dead in a field with the back of his head bashed. He instantly said, "Oh yeah. He was just throwing a boomerang and it hit him in the back of the head." Even when they hadn't found a boomerang yet. There is *no* way to deduce that, but the writers just say "Because he's smart tho."
In deadpool killustrated, Sherlock Holmes saves all marvel characters by remembering all tales within literature from Beaowulf (butchered name) to Tom Sawyer and Moby Dick. The mans mental capacity to remember stuff even in alternate sources (let alone in the actual Sherlock cannon) is insane
The Death Note doesn't require the fullest version of someone's name to take effect. Light killed Lind L. Tailor by writing his name as such, without having to know his middle name.
worth noting, the star feat at 14:44 also comes with the context that they were just at the observatory on that episode, the specific event/star being spoken on a loop as they fought Golem, and as such, that knowledge was quite recent for him to access. (it could be also inferred that Moriarty knew this, and that's why he gave Sherlock the puzzle to solve, as Moriarty wants to play with Sherlock and test his limits, he'd have joy in knowing Sherlock failed despite having the tools.) also, one more note: if I recall correctly, L had to resort to a direct approach almost instantly after distrust at the NPA ensued. but perhaps due to Sherlock taking a more passive approach and analyzing all the detectives one by one, it might take more time for him to meet light then otherwise. if so, there's a chance Misa actually comes into play before Sherlock can either meet light or acquire his death note. If you're using BBC's Sherlock, then it'd be game over for him, as Misa will most surely know about the smartest detective alive, and his face is in every news paper. (but you did use a weird composite of every version of Sherlock, which I kinda understand, but it's kinda unfair. BBC's Sherlock has a near OP mind palace...tho worth noting it has failed him in the past, and he also would refuse to believe in Shinnigami's until it's absolutely irrefutable, and even then he'd likely be as caught off-guard and as shocked as L did) and about the last two details you mentioned for how 'Light had given himself away early one', those can actually be explained.(I'll reply to this comment with the explanations).
First off- yes, even if they don't reveal light to be Kira, these moments could very well have served signaled to L that Light very well could be Kira from the start, but I slightly doubt it. he likely was still close to certain early on, but not for these two instances of "light slipping up" as you mention. 1. at that moment, Light is playing the cordial student. I think it's fair to say (based on my little understanding) that Japanese social culture has a bigger emphasis on being respectful/cordial to others, even more so to stranger, and even more so to others of higher authority/rank.(L being the best detective in the world, definitely "out ranking" Light). I believe their entire first interactions are based around this in mind for Light embodying the 'perfect cordial student' act (explaining why he doesn't aggressively question L's deduction leading to light as a suspect, as it could be disrespectful to L's skills and experience. And why he doesn't ask him if he's really L, as it could be seen as Light calling him a liar). Now to the letters: from an innocent perspective, Light assumes L has given him all the information he needed, he wouldn't think L would forget another one and instead assume the other letters either don't exist or aren't important. still- it's enough to be suspicious, just not enough to be indefensible. 2. As for Ray Pember, go back to that exchange again- from an innocent but smart student perspective, all Light did was connect the dots and fill in what L was about to say. He knows he is being suspected, and L brings up the detectives that all died investigating people tied to the NPA, he then specifically mentions Ray to Light, which then allows "innocent but sharp Light" to understand that Ray must have been the one fallowing Light, as it isn't that hard of a connection to make based on L having so much focus on light and L bringing up this one detective. L would have to expect Light to be capable of such deduction, as Light has already proven himself to be quite smart, and wouldn't see any other reason why L would specifically point out one of the detectives by name. (I will say for that 2nd one, I'd be curious to go to the manga and Japanese phrasing of that conversation. because the anime dub does make it harder to tell for certain if L laid the dots and Light just connected them, or if Light really talked as if he knew who Ray was before L mentioned his name, but I believe it makes sense when viewed in this way, Light just filled in L's thoughts, as it perfectly explains why L didn't make any remark on it, not even an internal one.)
Yea same I am reading the books currently but I can pay no attention so know I gotta re read the only cases I've have read. There are 2 movies Netflix if you didn't know.
I am happy you mentioned Sherlock Holmes ability to comprehend and understand the supernatural. Because some versions or people get it where because he based on deduction and logic any other worldly exception would throw him off or he wouldn't expect that truth. Clearly isn't true if you remove all impossible whatever is left no matter how improbable is the truth
I don't think that L is a better Detective than Sherlock Holmes by any stretch of the imagination. The very best tactic a Detective can use is to go undetected by their quarry. And the first thing L did was make himself known to Light. Which was just foolish.
I definitely agree having L show his face and directly stating to light that he was L was extremely dumb in any aspect of law enforcement or criminal investigation I know why he did it and the creator of the video also explains why he did it too as it stems from his immaturity and also wanting to provoke a reaction from his suspected quarry
L making himself known to light also helped with the case and it was also used to provoke and get a reaction from Light. Go and check how Light analysed every possible outcome when he got home after L revealed himself to him. Light still doubt it was even the real L, and said that he might have used a body double and other stuff as well. However that doesn't even justify your point of saying Sherlock is smarter than L. Sherlock never faced any supernatural case like the Kira case and Sherlock failed to solve some cases in his carrier too which were not even close to the Kira case. L never failed to solve any and would've solved the Kira case if not because REM stopped him, REM died because she prevented Misa's death, which means in the future L would've caught Light and Misa and sentenced them to death if REM didn't interfere. L narrowed down a mass murderer out of 7 billion(entire world) people to one person, without anything to work with (remember how other detectives said they couldn't handle the case where people around the world are dying of heart attack since there was nothing to work with, before they decided to call on L).
Breaking Bad fans be like: "What about Walter White tho?" Oh yes, the retired chemistry professor turned m3th cook would definitely prove too much for fiction's objectively greatest detective.
If Sherlock finds the hidden Death Note, then he wouldn't need to deduce anything anymore. He would be the holder of the death note, and would have the information. Also, Light would forget about the Death Note at this point, and he would likely not have the same safeguards he had in place in the story when he intentionally transferred the death note to someone else. At that point, the difficulty would be in being able to authoritatively prove that the Death Note is real, as in order to transfer it to someone else to give them such proof, you would also need to forget about it yourself.
Thats not even how it worked in Death Note. In DN when the Japanese Task Force saw The Death Note and talked to Rem all they had to do was Touch the DN in order to see her and talk to her. What you are talking about is claiming ownership of the DN. If you claim the DN as yours and transfer the owner ship to someone else then the person who owned it loses their memories. Anyone can see the DN, touch it, read what is inside of it, and remember it all, but ownership of the DN is where the amnesia comes into play.
Sherlock kinda has hacks here, he just kinda walks in and already knows everything, I don’t think it would be very interesting to watch them try to play cat and mouse because he literally just knows immediately
7:54 no, that is wrong and a clue that lead to L thinking it was Light. Light killed people that weren't even broadcasted and that lead to L thinking that the killer had either a family member that worked with the police or was working there himself.
20:40 For the sake of clarity I thought it was important to mention that Light's proclamation about Raye Penber and the FBI was during the scene where his Father was in the hospital over a stress induced heart attack. During that time frame there is a clear transition from night to day seeming to imply that they were already at the hospital for some amount of time and the situation concerning the FBI was explained to him in some amount of detail off screen. A great video all the same though!
Good video. I do feel a bit weird about you constantly repeating that Sherlock can tell a person’s whole life by just looking at them. That gives the impression that he’s magic. Both Conan Doyle, and Sherlock himself in the novels, constantly say that what Sherlock uses is simple observation and that was my favorite part of reading his methods - understanding what he noticed and how I, as the reader, could have come to the same conclusion (with the example of knowing how tall someone is based on how high up they write on a wall is, being one of my fav examples)
The way he does it in the novels is kind of magic tho... Like it is inpossible to get that much information of someone in such a little ammount of time as easily as he does it.
basically: if Light knows that Sherlock is investigating him, Light wins easily. Sherlock Holmes is a world famous, easily recognisable detective who publicly uses his full name. If Sherlock is investigating in private, this is flipped and Sherlock would eventually solve the Kira case, lights out for Light.
16:35 The only way I see Light "winning" is that he kills himself before Sherlock confronts him with evidence, or Light sacrifices his lifespan to use the shinigami eyes to kill Sherlock. Then again, if Light does this, I dont see him considering this a win as he loathes the idea of using the shinigami eyes himself, if anything, with Sherlock dead, Light would at best see this as a tie and it would gnaw at his mind until the rest of his days.
I have no doubt Sherlock could win since death note despite being about a supernatural force, is actually a lot more grounded than Sherlock Holmes. Though I feel like you really should’ve given Light more credit, I think it would’ve taken Sherlock a good while longer to catch Kira. The main thing I think you overlooked is Ryuk, Light would’ve absolutely used him against Sherlock.
I like these Sherlock matchups. You could do one in which he tries to catch/find the real name of The Joker. Seeing that Batman tie in at the end of the video, it would be fitting.
To be honest, it only depends on when in Sherlock Holmes' career that he takes on the Kira case. If it's pre-Moriarty, easy GG in favor of Holmes. In the Arthur Conan Doyle novels, he consistently shrugs off notoriety for solving his cases, pretending that inspectors LeStrade or Gregson did all of the work. Post-Moriarty, Holmes becomes more well known to the general public and thus is easier for someone with a Death Note to deal with. At that point, it depends on whether Holmes wants to openly investigate the case or go deep undercover, something absolutely in his skill set since he convinced the world he was dead for years until he chose to come out of hiding.
It’s hard for humans to solve super nature case, especially when it deals with memory erase and killing someone without having to be there will be really hard.
The big question is could columbo solve the Kira case? Short answer: yes Long answer: Light wouldn't even be able to use the death note on columbo's dog due to it not having a name. Columbo would bumble persistently until either Light plays his hand arrogantly or panics and incriminates himself.
This would actually be genius, because Colombo's strongest trait is playing off peoples ego's, they think he is an idiot, with an ego as big as Lights, he wouldn't even see Colombo as a threat until its too late.
Light is smart but he’s way too emotional and tends to get sloppy from time to time. He literally exposed his location in the second episode because he got pissed off and tried to kill L for no reason.
He could solve it, but his situation is different from Ls. Light would easily know his name due to his fame and his face would be in the papers. Ls case is coincidentally apt to fight Kira since he has no recorded identity and has never shown his face or given his real name, otherwise Light would have killed him much earlier in the series, and that was the dilemma in the series for how Light was going to take him out without the shinigami eyes. Sherlock absolutely has the capacity to solve it but I believe he wouldn't get the chance.
With sensible players, Light actually might have a chance. With average players, however, Light could do everything right and still get ejected due to a half-baked accusation of “being sus.”
They would be accusing random people that werent doing tasks, eventually catching onto light, light would need a way to kill the amogus guy, having to see their real face, of course, light, being a student, he can do tasks and if possible, accuse the amogus guy back in case he is the next target. First of all, he needs people so light cant be "ejected". Then seem less suspicious, and he will have a chance at winning
so in short: Light would lose because he's (atleast to some degree) grounded in reality (minus the deathnote of course) unlike sherlock,bats and other detectives with inhuman abilities. plus light died because he was childish and prideful which dummed him down
Sherlock Holmes absolutely does not have superhuman abilities, at least the original one doesn't. Kinda the point is that anyone could do this, he just has spent a lot of time and energy on doing it on top of having a lot of knowledge. Sherlock Holmes is all about reality, because he follows logic, that's why there are cases he couldn't solve, because sometimes you just don't have enough facts available.
As soon as Sherlock Holmes even sees Light, he's already gonna know his background or something and immediately know if anything is off. He just always kinda does that I don't even know how, but he's definitely pulling that kind of bullshit, I already know.
8:55 Eeeeeh, sort of. Unless called out for being the monster he is, Light tends to keep calm and think carefully about the pros and cons of nearly every action. For example, he knew if he just killed Raye Penber he would be fucked, because he was only one of 12 Private Eyes sent to various suspects. He knew he had to kill 12 birds with one stone, hence the elaborate scheme to trick him into writing the names of his compatriots into the Death Note after the other elaborate scheme to get his name.
7:18 Astronomy? Sherlock literally didn't know that the Earth revolved around the Sun as it "wouldn't make a pennyworth of a difference to him or his work".
If it was Auguste Dupin he would see Light and say: "Yeah! He is Kira, look how he sees his watch all the time and how he can't keep a straight face for a second without going into introspection to get out of this situation."
This only holds true if Light fights how he fights L. Light only let out clues so he could get close to L, if Sherlock doesn't challenge him, Light wouldn't let out a lot of these clues
um wasn't L supposed to be Sher L ock. and Watari was Watson. was pretty obvious when i watched it that it was an adaptation of Sherlock. Kira is Moriarty, math genius, twisted moral compass, etc.
Light wouldn't just kill Sherlock Holmes if Holmes isn't on Light's radar. Holmes is a consultant. People come to him for advice. So people will be working on the frontline for Holmes. In fact, Holmes would use a persona like L did. Distracting him from Sherlock Holmes to (Alternate Personality). Either way, Sherlock Holmes is far smarter than Light. I read all the original stories and watched Death Note over 20 times. Huge fan of both. But it's not even close.
@@realist3977I read all 4 Sherlock novels and all 56 stories. I watched the entire Death Note anime and also read the entire manga several times + How To Read Vol. 13, L Changes The World, BB Case, etc. I can guarantee you that Sherlock is way, way above Light intellectually. Sherlock would dismantle Light's facade very easily...
the thing with L dragging the case on is comepletly wrong. I've seen this exact argument too many times. From L's Point of view it looked like Light was finishing his thought process who would just randomly talk to suspect about a FBI agent who has been killed by him? ofc he tells the suspect about that becouse he was suspicious Light just finished his train of thought. Many people with above average intelligence could end that train of thought. and for the 3 cards you mentioned. L wants to have full blown proof yes it was suspicious and Light did fuck up there but he didnt blunder it to the point of being 100% Kira he just made himself more suspicious
Idk maybe Sherlock would instantly take the false bottom up and the notebook burns up like the trap works, I mean that was the point of why light made that trap in the first place
the fun thing is that anybody that could hack the police computers could get the information so neither L nor Sherlock could be sure that Kira is related to the police. this is something that the manga decides based on plot needs but in real life that could cause more harm than good. if you aren't directly related to the police, Sherlock (or L) would be doomed. knowing this, Sherlock would never assume that Kira is directly related to the police so he wouldn't be able to find Light. let's not talk about the "I found that the first murder happened in japan because of reasons" or that sherlock wouldn't know how kira kills. there's no reason for sherlock to try to find a death note in kira's bedroom since he doesn't know you need to use a notebook to kill. or that a regular pen, mixed with other regular pens, is a "key" to open the secret compartment where the notebook is.
Well they noted all these murders where done on publicly available people and in fact they purposely used lind L Taylor a person who records where kept within the police too trick light. Therefore light doesn't have access to thid information yet he does have access to specific information regarding his own investigation? A investigation that would probably be kept more secure if not just done on paper. Not to mention further that L at least wanted to stur up issues and suspension so he could A drag the FBI into helping him and B make sure the taskforce was left only with people he could trust completely.
@@Fairenough642 in fact, kira didn't kill Taylor for being a criminal. he killed him because Taylor claimed to be L and that he would find kira and bring him to "justice". kira didn't had any non public information about taylor. L only found where to use the Tailor scam because he so happened to know, based on nothing, that kira was in japan. because, lets be real. if you count criminals around the whole world, within a several days frame, it's not impossible that more than one dies of heart attack. that would make L's "I knew who was the first victim" an absurd. L doesn't has enough criminals to play a city by city Taylor scam around the whole world. there was also the chance that kira didn't kill taylor so fast. if Kira had writen something on the lines of "Lind L. Taylor dies of heart attack in two days" L's plan would be ruined.
@@WilliamWizer I know thats what I said, I was making a point about the idea that the other person said "light could have been a hacker who hacked the police that's how he knew about him being thought of too be a highschooler." but the lind l taylor thing in part proved that he did not have none public available criminals records otherwise he could have known it was not really l and not just kill him so fast. that's what L said then and there so therefore light had no secret police records he was no hacker yet he did have secret information in the taskforce therefore light is someone in or around someone in the taskforce its not a plot hole from what I can see. Light could have made the death 2 days later but A it could have been hidden if he did that he wanted to see L die so he knew it was well L real name and B he wanted to make a show and say "no one come after me look I killed the real l live as he called me out" and C he was not going to do it until L called him out on his views of justice and he got emotional. He had yet to feel fear or on the back foot so he kinda thought he was not touchable. What I have more issue with Is light killing the FBI agents there was no real good reason too and it only hurt him from what i could see i mean sure he wanted to sew decient in the ranks but he could have done it in a more subtle way
@@Fairenough642 I won't say that it's a plot hole. it's just that L's trick worked because he knew that Kira was from japan and he knew it... because no reason. plot just ignores the fact that heart attack isn't that uncommon worldwide. any criminal that died of heart attack in any part of the world could had been Kira's first test but L, by miracle of plot convenience, knew it was the guy that died in japan. L's Taylor stunt only worked because, by miracle of plot convenience, Light decided that he had to kill a non-criminal (for the first time) in fear of being found knowing that he can't be found. in fact, Kira wanted to be seen as a force of justice so killing the detective in public would only hurt his image and does nothing good since nobody can prove he is kira. but, by miracle of plot convenience kira breaks his "rule" of killing only criminals to get rid of a detective. and yes. Kira could had been far more subtle with the FBI. he has the power to control people's actions before the die and can define the cause of death. he only had to take care of one of them and not with a heart attack. control what he does or doesn't do so he reports you aren't suspicious and then make him die of accident three days later. who cares abut the other FBI? I was tailed, that agent decided I'm innocent, that's all.
@@WilliamWizer he suspected he was in japan so he started there, the reason was his first victim was a criminal doing a crime who suddenly died of a random heart attack mid crime. it was the most suspisios death and the first one to happen so its a safe beat to guess japan. L also said he did not expect things to go so well he might have had back up plans and ideas
The fact that this takes half its script from Seths Video makes this feel like some sort of parallel universe Its still interesting; But could definitely have benefitted from more personalization/changes to stand out
I tend not to be impressed easily by people's intelligence, but within the first chapter of the sign of the four (if I'm remembering correctly), I found Sherlock Holmes to be a genius. It was the pocket watch deduction where he was able to tell so much about Dr. Watsons brother, without ever even knowing he had a brother beforehand, and he explained how he deducted it. I haven't read every book, only 2 plus part of the sign of the four.
Are you sure you're not confusing the list of things Holmes has NO knowledge of (because they're not related to criminology and he believes his brain won't have room for everything) with a list of things he has knowledge in? Even in the modern series when he knew a star in a painting was in the wrong place, the joke was that he'd just gained that information and had to admit it was useful.
With the help of Mycroft, Sherlock would solve the case in probably a week tbh , thats how long he took to solve the Sign of Four case. He will deduce who it is very easily and then take his own time to find evidence. About him not being in Japan; Holmes has a lot of 'fans' around the world , like one in france that is memtioned once , so it wouldnt be far too deduce he has contacts on japan (on a modern-setting of course) Sherlock IS well known , but not enough for Light to known him
Holmes would demolish Light in every way. Yes I've read the books and no I'm not being biased. I love Death Note and Holmes equally but Light makes too many mistakes that L missed that Holmes would not let slide. Simple.
It stands to reason that Light would have read illustrated Sherlock Holmes novels as well, so he would know his real name, face and his absolutely incredible abilities. What if Light thought that Sherlock Holmes was too dangerous to live and out of mere pure precaution killed him?
Sherlock would instantly gather that A) The killer is a student in the Kanto Region, and B) He only kills those whose name and face are made public, but he wouldn't suspect supernatural means until a crime scene investigation and and possibly an autopsy. "Notice anything, Watson?" "Nothing out of the ordinary." "Exactly."
Sherlock Holmes would solve the Kira case because all of the cases he solved led back to family members, so he'd have at least a 50/50 chance, which is WAY better odds than he's had before.
@@user-zb8hc2im4e This video is strongly based on the books, there Moriarty is one of the only people to ever live who could contend with a mind like Holmes.
Holmes is given detective plot armor where he makes discoveries without a justifiable amount of evidence or proof to inspire it. He just knows shit. Of course he’d win
As a Victorian era "man of science", Holmes is at a substantial disadvantage over many more intuitive detectives. By his own admission he is incredibly ignorant outside his area of expertise. Make no mistake, if he can wrap his head around the truth of what is happening, he solves the case faster than anyone, but his motto "once you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains however improbable is correct" could backfire.
Sherlock gets the advantage because he's up front about the few cases he's lost (I believe it's five times by men and once by a woman, which may or may not include Irene Adler). He's proud but not so proud as to boast that he's never lost, or that some people (like his brother) are far better than he. Also, for the record, he officially lost against the KKK, but I'd give him a pass on that one.
Light no diffs, not because Sherlock couldn't figure out who Kira is, but because SH is a public figure and doesnt use an alias in in his cannon, and Lights dad gets put on the Kira task force. All he'd have to do is hear his dad say that he's on the task force with Sherlock Holmes and Light can just look him up on Wikipedia 🤷♂️
Can we get to 2k subs??
Congrats on getting them!
Could Lieutenant Columbo solve the Kira case?
Can painter raise the dancing cloud the feet light y’all give me or can pain the dancing clown notice where you could tesy Mikami without even touching the death note note
I learnt more about Sherlock homes lore in this video than I would have through general cultural social and memetical osmosis
Do whether Lelouch can solve the kira case
No joke, I’ve read the entire Sherlock Holmes series, light stands absolutely ZERO chance
With the slightest clue Sherlock gets, Light would have a 99% chance of being caught...
The DN characters are brilliant. But Holmes is a monster. Even in fiction, hardly anyone can match his reasoning ability...
@@Fran-tf6rz only mycroft and moriarty match holmes
@@ola_eboda i think eurus but yeah no one
Nah I swear to god, for those who don’t know:
When Sherlock Holmes first met Watson: he deducted that Watson was coming from a war in Afghanistan as a medic and was extremely sick in a few seconds by seeing on him: dirt and bad posture or some trivial BS. He’s a beast
@@Fran-tf6rz koji and johan are smarter than sherlock
Sherlock's issue is if Kira learned he was being hunted by Sherlock Holmes it would be much easier to kill him with the notebook, I doubt it would be nearly as difficult for Kira to dig up Sherlock's full name and jot him down compared to Bats and L.
Thing is, Sherlock wouldn't reveal himself to challenge light like L did. He'd understand the exposure
But if Sherlock Holmes is this big famous detective, light would just look him up and kill him as soon as he found out he was being investigated by some famous detective from London since there isn't many of them. He might just blackmail the politicians like he did to get the FBI to back down in the anime.
@@ΑΡΙΣΤΟΤΕΛΗΣΛΑΧΑΝΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ L revealed himself to show that he had tricked Kira and to prove, in public, that Kira can't kill anybody. Sherlock would also need to find in which city Kira is so he would reveal himself. perhaps not his real name but Sherlock doesn't hide himself as much as L (who nobody knows his real name or has seen his picture)
@@WilliamWizer Sherlock would probably deduce Kira kills just using names, so he wouldn't openly reveal he's investigating him.
He would have to confirm his region yes, but he'd likely find a less direct way to do so.
@@user-mx4is4fx3c how would he deduce its based on names? It could be photos
Holy crap, I genuinely didn't know how big brain Sherlock was. Sure, I already knew that he was an absolutely amazing detective, but I didn't know that he could do things like this. 14:44
my favorite moment in Sherlock uk was when he deciphered that picture of numbers as a 747 plane, named the airport and a time range in a matter of seconds.
th-cam.com/video/bYXhA8VG8Lw/w-d-xo.html
also, in that exact scene (ive watched it) there was technology at the time but there wasnt any time to search it up. also sherlock knew NOTHING about space and the stars. watson evennsaid afterwards it wouldve helped a lot if he knew.
BBC Sherlock is written so ridiculously it’s kind of a meme
Kind of unrelated,but the other reason I like Sherlock besides his amazing reasoning ability,is that he can literally fight 😅
Like a wrestling match,against a price fighter.
I think most other fictional geniuses could probably beat Light, because the whole point of "Death Note" is that despite being geniuses, Light and L are ultimately a couple of immature, borderline-insane manchildren who are, deep down, more concerned about playing a game with each other than actually accomplishing either of their goals. Light didn't have to kill Lind L. Tailor, he could have easily ignored the taunting and never revealed his location. Similarly, L didn't have to bait and provoke Kira after Tailor was killed, he could have said nothing more, cut the broadcast, and simply shared his findings with the police. That first scene is brilliant for many reasons, but one of which is that it simultaneously shows off Light and L's shared flaw that got them both killed: Their pride.
Light especially constantly lets his anger and ego get the best of him, and there are several points in the story where he could have easily won if he had just calmed the hell down, realistically looked at his limitations, and thought about it longer. It's story about hubris, about a young man who was told his whole life that he was special and destined for great things and how this coddling ultimately ruined him the second he got a small taste of real power.
The larger issue that Death Note has in writing its geniuses is that it writes out their thought processes while most fiction writers just say "they innately know something they really shouldn't because they're just so smart." L is written with a level of genius where he has realistic human limitations on what he can reason out. If someone was shot in an alleyway he couldn't sniff the air and say, "The victim was shot with this model of gun, at precisely this time, fired from this height," etc. because that sort of writing is asinine but it's unfortunately how a lot of writers do things.
While L didn't need to reveal that he fooled Kira with the Lind L Taylor scheme, it actually was the better move in the long run. Since Kira was also hunting down L, trying to find his name and face, it led to many of Light's further mistakes. Light's use of police records was done specifically as a means of him taking an offensive strategy against L and that's what caused him to be tracked by Raye Pember which would ultimately cause a ton of trouble for him down the road. But none of that happens if L doesn't tell Light, "I fooled you and I'm hunting you down." Light would have simply continued regular Kira killings.
Remember that by the broadcast plan, all it really proved was that Kira existed, could kill from a remote distance with minimal information, and was in Kanto at the time of the broadcast, not any particular information about his personal life, or how his power worked.
The same goes for the suicide notes that led to the theory that Kira has some influence over a person's actions prior to their death. He wouldn't have given L that if he wasn't trying to taunt him, he would have done his experimentation in a more subtle way.
Light's response to being taunted by L is what led to him making decisions that were rational for Light (his goal being to take out L ASAP rather than simply avoid being caught) but since he was being more offensive he also gave more information than he would via his normal Kira activity.
Even if you did the same broadcast plan, unless you got more information shortly after it, you can't be definitively certain that Kira didn't simply leave Kanto shortly after it happened. You could "assume" that to be the case but you can never be certain. And you certainly can't narrow it down to someone who has access to police records.
@Zetact_ ya, that's the problem with other detectives, their senses, reasoning ability, and knowledge are inherently inhuman. Some detectives have senses like a bloodhound like you stated, or have the intelligence of a God like batman who is 'supposedly ' an ordinary man. When you right out the actual thought process of the detective, you actually have to have a way for them to deduce information. That is why L and Light's battle of wits was unique, they're both human but the author explained how both of them thought out each situation. Not randomly discovering things like other detective stories
L opinion
very good comment, good job
"You could "assume" that to be the case but you can never be certain." Well yes, but it's the most reasonable working theory, otherwise you'd have nothing to go on. And nothing came up to disprove the theory. I think L could reasonably have gleaned even more information remotely by controlling the police records and areas to which the police records were sent, engineering fake blackouts, and varying high school student curfew times (which would be a way of confirming/eliminating the high school hypothesis). L shouldn't have revealed himself on the broadcast -- given a week of regular Kira killings you could reasonably narrow it down to one or two neighbourhoods in the Kanto region, and if you had extra investigations on the side eg. through tracking internet traffic that would be enough information to narrow it down to a small pool of suspects. And of course Light being the police chief's son would make him stand out.
sherlock holmes would pull up to light’s house, sniff his pillow, feel his tv screen, taste his chips, and immediately know everything light has done since the fourth grade
Real
no shit sherlock
Just like in Study in Scarlet. He just shows up, sees everything and then states as if it was that obvious or easy for everyone else to see...
Not the biggest Holmes fan, so when I saw the title I thought, "It would depend on what he knows about supernatural events." Sure enough, he's dealt with ghosts. Then it was a slam dunk in my opinion. Light's problems dealing with detectives in general is their vast experience compared to his, he has to reason his way through everything, since the entire situation is new to him. An old hand like Batman or Holmes would make short work of him. L had three major stumbling blocks: 1) no idea about the supernatural, 2) desire to form a friendship, and 3) his idiosyncratic ideas about winning. Near could win because L's investigation took care of (1) and he had no care at all for (2). (3) still hung him up, as the competition with Mello. But I digress. Holmes really had none of these three flaws and would likely solve it straightforwardly. Great video.
True
Big thing I want to respond to
L didn't want to form a friendship with anyone, and often thought little of those around him.
He called Light a friend as a manipulation tactic, in reality he hated Light's guts
I have a problem with a couple of these.
1. L didn't care on making friends with Light, that was just to mess with him.
2. Near had to start from scratch when approaching the Kira case. All he knew was that Kira killed L, that was it. This can be explained easily by the fact Watari deleted all of the files, and the Near was unaware of the scene between Light, Misa, and Light's father pretending to shoot his son.
3. I believe Sherlock is indeed a better detective, but L's knowledge is more expansive than Sherlock's, given that Sherlock refuses to learn things that he deems unimportant, even politics. L has high expertise in the economy, stocks, politics, etc. He's like a mixture of Sherlock and Mycroft.
But otherwise, I agree with you.
L never desires to form a friendship with anyone, especially not Light
@@katz7609 On point three he explains his reasoning for being selective with what he knows. He does so as not to muddle his thought process and having unnecessary information to cloud his own judgement. He does recall all the information he has learned throughout the series. Even in the SH games he keeps a vast archive in his apartment.
The only chance Light has is to get Sherlock before Sherlock knows the name and face requirements. Sherlock has enough talent and influence to wipe himself off any public database as long as he knows a name and face are required. If he doesn’t learn that until after meeting Light and saying his name, that’s a solid GG in Light’s favor
the issue there is sherlock is famous. light would know of his existence and the anime would change to that too. before L challenged light, light didnt know he existed. sherlock doesnt have the element of surprise here and his win condition makes it so he cant win. he either works with the police and light notices somethings off or he follows light without the cops first ryuk tells him and shit hits the fan for sherlock there.
@@offline2807 light will all ways win unless Sh is just starting
@@tfordham13 if shits just starting its even easier for light as it becomes near impossible to account for the deathnote unless sherlock already has experience with it. sherlock cant work with the cops as he gets filed in even if with an alias hes the odd man out and sticks our like a sore thumb. if not he can never get the evidence needed to convict light legally making it not able to be used in court
@@offline2807 Sherlock is only famous IRL. In the fictional world, it would depend on which stage of his career he's on and whether or not he's featured in the news or the media (sometimes the police don't want to embarrass themselves, and Sherlock doesn't chase fame, so the credit for solving his cases may go to Gregson or Lestrade). Even then, his fame would be confined to the United Kingdom, and to even start researching into that, Light would need to know that Sherlock is on his case, which he wouldn't, since unlike L, Sherlock would not announce it publicly and would work with the Japanese police under a fake name.
@@Lernos1 1 the dude even says in the video light is aware of sherlocks existence
2 since this is the case light is knowledgeable on sherlocks cases. Meaning he knows this is the kind of case sherlock would take.
3 as i have said before in other responses even with an alias he would be the odd one out on the task force or working with the task force seeing as he isnt L and doesnt seem to have global backing or the ability to just hide his name behind something like the title of "L" so to work with the cops he ends up in the system
4 If sherlock doesnt work with the police he cant win anyways. there would be no way to legally get the proof required for a conviction.
Sherlock: These murders are seemingly random, one criminal there the other criminal over there, the only two things these all have in common is they are all criminals being murdered and they are all publicly known figures. At least they were at the start, and recently even criminals unknown to public have been executed. I conclude that our murderer, dear Watson, first started doing this... business... by observing the names of his victims on the news, but then somehow got access to police files.
"That seems logical.", I replied to my friend but I knew there was more to his reasoning he was not revealing.
Sherlock: I was never a believer in the supernatural, dear Watson. Yet I can not explain this Kira fellow's power that stretches over vast distances. If we are dealing with the supernatural, then it would not be out of the question that this man, or a woman, would gain some sort of mystic knowledge. Yet it seems his knowledge is limited. I went through it with Interpol, and most of his recent victims were from the police files one would get locally in Japan. So it is quite obviously a person living in Japan, with connections to Japanese police, who started dispending his strange version of justice.
"That narrows it down a lot, Sherlock!", I shouted.
Sherlock: It does, doesn't it? I do hear footsteps and these should be our friends from Japanese police force coming to discuss our case.
Ten men entered the room, and among them one particularly stood out, a handsome young man, much younger than the rest, with eyes as sharp as my friend's.
Sherlock: I am glad that you all agreed to meet me here, in this international effort. I must say, I am without a clue and do not know how to stop Kira.
They had a long talk, and the young man was revealed to be the son of the police chief in Japan. He was sort of an intellectual prodigy back home and was helping his father solve the case. His name being even more unusual than Sherlock's, as he is called Light. After the talk between these gentlemen was over, Holmes went and shook each man's hand. But when he reached for Light's hand, he put on the handcuffs on both of Light's hands with lightning quickness.
"What is the meaning of this?!", almost everyone shouted at the same time at my friend.
Sherlock: The meaning is... this is your Kira.
He leaned on the desk and took out his pipe, which he quickly lighted. After he inhaled one smoke and exhaled it, he pointed his pipe at Light.
Sherlock: Do you want to explain to everyone why you did what you did? And how you did it? Because not even I know that.
Light: This is preposterous!
Sherlock: Then allow me, in the inner lining pocket of his jacket you will find a small book most likely containing the names of all of his victims. I have noticed a small bulge on his jacket that should fit the size of a medium notebook we are searching for. I have also noticed the blisters on this young man's hand that would come from someone spending a lot of time, lets say writing names in a notebook.
The police officers indeed searched Light, and took out a small black notebook. As they went through it, they indeed found the names of all of Light's victims.
Light: This is ridiculous! You believe I am the Kira just because of some notebook? I was helping to solve the case so of course I would keep notes there...
Sherlock: You might wonder how I came to these conclusions? Well, it took a lot of deaths before I did. We kept feeding different files to different police departments. Some had pictures of criminals and some had names. I soon realized you would need both the picture and the name of the person for your mysterious powers to work. By sending different types of files to different parts of Japan I was soon able to locate you right to the exact police station. Then I realized one other thing. Sometimes murders would happen one after another with a slight delay. Why the delay I wondered? What was it that you had to do for the murders to happen? If you could kill people using your thoughts then there would be no delay. The delay would be only the time for you to read the name. Was it some chanting you had to do, magical words? Then I did another test, I sent some poor victims with long names, some with short names. Interestingly enough, those with short names had a shorter delay.
"He was writing their names in the book!", I shouted.
Sherlock: Well, yes, I was coming to that. But it could have been that the boy was speaking the names. However I solved that by sending some same sounding names with slightly different spelling. I deducted he was writing the names. I compared the speeds and times it would take for someone to write the names I was sending with the delay between the murders and I knew someone was using a certain type of pen and paper for the delay to be just right. Well, here we are now. That book has supernatural powers and to test it we won't kill a human but the member of the canine species. I will be the one to write the poor dog's name in the book and I do know the dog's face. He is an old dog, and his time is about right to go.
Light: You can't! You won't get away with this! I am the God of this world!
Sherlock: Not when your writing hands are tied, obviously. My name is Holmes by the way. Sherlock Holmes.
Only thing missing is lestrade and gregson taking credit. Mycroft having a talk with the Japanese delegation about the fallout of Kira and Sherlock with a medal the next day.
Misa Amane being arrested. New laws making the agencies all over the globe start to search for other notebooks of that nature. Perhaps Moriarty trying to get a hold of them or sell fakes
@@lupohutchington269 And Sherlock immediately burning the book after it is proven it works while British and Japanese agents tried to take it to their governments.
@vitezjura Are you reincarnated version of conan doyle ?
@@architprajapati4220 I just read a couple of novels so I tried to recreate the style but the original author is always the best.
Sherlock Holmes: The Kira Case
Scene: 1 - Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson were ensconced within their legendary office on Baker Street when Inspector Lestrade, a high-ranking detective in the London police force, burst in with an air of urgency.
Inspector Lestrade: Sherlock Holmes, I am greatly relieved to find you at this juncture. We find ourselves embroiled in a most intriguing case, and I implore your sagacity and acumen to aid us.
Sherlock Holmes: Forgive my interruption, Inspector Lestrade. Before you proceed, may I deduce the nature of this case? Your countenance and urgency lead me to surmise that it involves a matter of grave consequence.
Inspector Lestrade, slightly taken aback by Holmes' interruption, nodded in agreement.
Inspector Lestrade: Indeed, Holmes. Your intuition serves you well. We are faced with a perplexing series of incidents involving sudden and inexplicable cardiac arrests. The victims, as far as we can ascertain, are known criminals. The cause behind these mysterious deaths eludes us.
Sherlock Holmes: Ah, the game is afoot! These circumstances are quite intriguing, Inspector. A string of cardiac arrests afflicting known criminals raises several pertinent questions. Are there any commonalities among the victims? Are there external factors at play that manipulate their cardiac systems?
Inspector Lestrade: Your deductions, Holmes, are indeed astute. In recent days, this individuals are from various walks of life and have met their demise through this unexplained fate. Without exception, have no history of health issues or any other plausible cause that could account for their sudden deaths.
Sherlock Holmes: Fascinating, Inspector Lestrade. The fact that these individuals hail from different regions and backgrounds, yet share a common fate, is indeed intriguing. Please indulge me further. Can you provide a breakdown of the regions from which they originated?
Inspector Lestrade: Certainly, Holmes. The victims span various cities and countries, with a concentration of cases centered around London. Two of the deceased were notorious criminals who operated within the confines of our fair city. The remaining victims were scattered across different localities outside the United Kingdom. Some hailed from the bustling streets of New York City, while others were involved in criminal enterprises in Paris and Tokyo.
Sherlock Holmes, absorbing the information with a keen focus, allowed his mind to delve into the depths of his extensive knowledge and experience.
Sherlock Holmes: Remarkable, Lestrade. We are dealing with a web of criminal activity that spans borders, a tapestry woven by the darkest elements of society. It seems that these targeted individuals were all prominent figures within the criminal underworld, notorious for their malevolence and heinous acts.
Sherlock Holmes: Inspector... might you enlighten me as to the total number of victims in this case? How many lives have been claimed thus far?
Inspector Lestrade: We have documented a total of 37 victims over the course of two days. The first day saw 14 unfortunate souls perish, followed by 23 more on the subsequent day, which happens to be today. And interestingly enough, among the victims just now, were the notorious criminals i talked about, James "The Razor" Reynolds and Isabel "Black Widow" Thompson.
Sherlock Holmes paused for a moment, his mind working through the details and connections.
Sherlock Holmes: It appears that this organization, or individual, is driven by a vigilante-like motivation. Their actions suggest a skewed sense of justice, perhaps rooted in a simplistic understanding of right and wrong. It is as if they are playing the role of judge and executioner, targeting criminals whom they believe deserve punishment.
Dr. Watson listened attentively, aware of Holmes' ability to unravel complex motivations and patterns.
Dr. Watson: So, you believe this perpetrator is acting as a self-proclaimed arbiter of justice, taking it upon themselves to mete out punishment to those they deem guilty?
Sherlock Holmes: Precisely, Watson. Their method of using cardiac arrests as a means of execution is both calculated and symbolic. It serves as a statement, a message to the criminal underworld that their reign of terror will not go unpunished.
Dr. Watson: But who could possess such power and resources to orchestrate these targeted attacks? And why now?
Sherlock Holmes absorbed by information, his mind racing to discern the significance of those death numbers.
Sherlock Holmes: What can you tell me about the interval between these deaths? Is there a discernible pattern?
Inspector Lestrade: The interval between each death is staggeringly short, Holmes. Merely a matter of seconds, ranging from 10 to 40 seconds between each fatal occurrence.
Sherlock Holmes: It is a grave mistake to make assumptions based on incomplete information, but alas, the pursuit of truth often demands that we act with limited knowledge. Very well, Inspector Lestrade, I shall take up this case and devote my faculties to unraveling its intricate web of secrets. However, I implore you to provide me with every detail at your disposal. I need a comprehensive understanding of these victims, their criminal pasts, and any connections they may have had with each other. Furthermore, I request access to any pertinent evidence and witness testimonies that could shed light on the enigma we face. And gather information too on whether these criminals were indeed exposed to the public eye, whether through media coverage, court proceedings, or any other means. It is of utmost importance to ascertain whether their identities were widely known, for it could provide valuable insight into the workings of our elusive perpetrator.
Inspector Lestrade, taking note of Holmes' request, nodded in agreement and made a mental note to collect the necessary information.
Inspector Lestrade: I shall task my team with delving into the public records and media archives to determine the extent of exposure these individuals had. If they were indeed widely recognized, it may serve as a clue to the motivation behind these killings.
Sherlock Holmes: Excellent, Inspector. Furthermore, I urge you to search our archives for any past cases involving similar patterns of strange and unexplained deaths. We must ascertain if there are any precedents or recurring themes that may shed light on our current investigation.
Inspector Lestrade hastily made his way out of the room, leaving Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson to observe the flurry of activity around them. As they stood there, Sherlock couldn't resist making a witty remark.
Sherlock Holmes: Ah, Watson, the chaos that ensues when mysteries unfold! It's quite reminiscent of a circus, wouldn't you agree?
Dr. Watson chuckled at Sherlock's comment, appreciating his ability to find amusement even in the most perplexing situations. But then, Watson raised a question that had been lingering in his mind.
Dr. Watson: Sherlock, do you think there's a possibility that the supernatural is at play here? Could there be forces beyond our comprehension guiding these events?
Sherlock Holmes, drawing from his vast repertoire of cases and experiences, responded with his usual skepticism, grounded in logic and reason.
Sherlock Holmes: Watson, my dear friend, I have encountered numerous cases in my career where the appearance of the supernatural was nothing more than a cleverly crafted illusion or a product of human ingenuity. From the Hound of the Baskervilles to the Speckled Band, I have unraveled the mysteries behind these seemingly otherworldly occurrences. In every instance, there was a rational explanation, grounded in the realm of the natural.
Dr. Watson observed the discourse between Holmes and him. Their mind brimming with anticipation as they prepared to embark on an arduous journey through the murky realms of enigma. With unwavering trust in their partnership and unwavering belief in Holmes' singular brilliance, he stood ready to lend his unwavering support in the quest for truth.
silence...................
.....then
Sherlock Holmes: Well... let us proceed under the assumption that our adversaries are human, driven by a peculiar notion of right and wrong, perhaps in their youthful and erratic pursuit of justice. If they are indeed vigilantes, they may be prone to leaving behind traces of their actions.
Now, let us consider the second option, the wrath of a god upon this wretched world. If such a supernatural force were at play, I fear our endeavors may be in vain. After all, how can mortal minds comprehend the whims and motives of an entity beyond our realm? In the face of such power, our deductions and investigations may prove futile.
And yet, even as the end looms before us, Watson, let us not forget to savor the present moment. Before the world succumbs to its inevitable demise, I propose we indulge in one of my favorite hobbies, the art of playing the violin. There's nothing quite like the soothing melodies to accompany us in these uncertain times.
With a smile and a touch of irony, Sherlock Holmes set aside the weight of their impending doom and reached for his beloved instrument, ready to play a haunting tune that echoed the enigma of their situation. As the final notes lingered in the air, the scene came to a close, leaving behind an air of melancholic anticipation for the unknown that lay ahead.
Wow.
AI has come far, aye.
Oh my God , THE script.
The only thing you said in this entire video that I disagree with is "L is a better detective than Sherlock."
Everything else was spot on.
I listened to the original Sherlock Holms books (because audiobooks), so I know for a fact that Sherlock would consider it a win if he killed Light (or if Light killed himself), so long as he had sufficient evidence to know Light was guilty. He would PREFER to have Light tried and convicted in a court of law, but Sherlock is more than willing to get his hands dirty if necessary. Just ask Professor Moriarty
Or the Adventure of the Speckled Band
Resulted in an accidental suicide, but Holmes still counted it as a win.
As it should be. Sherlock the greatest detective of all fiction. May have to disagree on you with this but L has to wear a dunce cap if he’s in the same room as Holmes. Love them both but there’s no denying it.
i'm not sure if sherlock is the greatest detective in all fiction but obviously L is nowhere near as good as him.
@@thephoenix4093 how come you aren’t sure
@@detectiveemilio3416 because of the amount of great detectives in general for example batman, the question and more.
@@thephoenix4093 you know about the time Batman sought help from Sherlock? Sherlock solved it faster than Batman with no effort at all. And the other detectives of fiction out there do not stand a chance against Sherlock. You might say Hercule Poirot but that man uses his gut feeling most of the time.
@@detectiveemilio3416 you do realize that batman and Sherlock are not in the same universe... However i do remember he once asked help from the question but batman never met Sherlock although as a child he read books about him.
You need to read Sherlock Holmes a study in scarlet. In the book, Sherlock Holmes already knows who the murderer is in the case. He knew before anyone else did, much like the guy you’re talking ab, Sherlock didn’t catch him bc he was trying to have fun. He then said he did know who the guy was because lastrade, Gregson and Watson told him to say who the murderer is, or more people will die. The entire book, ever since Sherlock got on the case, he knew who the murderer was. He knew the murderer was,(spoiler alert, in case anyone wants to read the book for themselves.) it was the taxi driver. He was just having fun with the case, but he also just needed the evidence, which he got in the end of the story.
L also knew tho
@@tshegomokobodi7507 yes but my argument was that L wasn’t much smarter like the guy in the video said. He said L was smarter bc he knew the entire time. Sherlock did the same thing tho in Study in Scarlet.
@@swagmasterr6862 yeah I kinda stopped caring when I saw the thing about Sherlock deducing a password by thinking about it since that's just magic and nothing else
@@tshegomokobodi7507 I suppose, but in the world we just have to believe that he is just that intelligent
@@tshegomokobodi7507 The writers in that show particularly don't know how to write smart characters. It's hard for dumb people to write smart characters, so they kind of just give him magic intuition.
I think there was a case where a man was lying dead in a field with the back of his head bashed. He instantly said, "Oh yeah. He was just throwing a boomerang and it hit him in the back of the head." Even when they hadn't found a boomerang yet.
There is *no* way to deduce that, but the writers just say "Because he's smart tho."
In deadpool killustrated, Sherlock Holmes saves all marvel characters by remembering all tales within literature from Beaowulf (butchered name) to Tom Sawyer and Moby Dick. The mans mental capacity to remember stuff even in alternate sources (let alone in the actual Sherlock cannon) is insane
The fact no one knows Sherlock's real name beside his family and watson makes him already invincible
The Death Note doesn't require the fullest version of someone's name to take effect. Light killed Lind L. Tailor by writing his name as such, without having to know his middle name.
@@AstraIVagabond but Sherlock is a front just like just L, you have to know at least the real first name
@@stanfordtonnychikowore3807 it is about Sherlock was just his weird ass name like his brother Mycroft their parents were not good at names
@@stanfordtonnychikowore3807 L is a pseudonym, no? Cause L's real name is Ryuzaki
Edit: Nvm
Wait that's not his name?
I'd call this:
Sherlock Holmes and the Killer Book.
worth noting, the star feat at 14:44 also comes with the context that they were just at the observatory on that episode, the specific event/star being spoken on a loop as they fought Golem, and as such, that knowledge was quite recent for him to access. (it could be also inferred that Moriarty knew this, and that's why he gave Sherlock the puzzle to solve, as Moriarty wants to play with Sherlock and test his limits, he'd have joy in knowing Sherlock failed despite having the tools.)
also, one more note: if I recall correctly, L had to resort to a direct approach almost instantly after distrust at the NPA ensued. but perhaps due to Sherlock taking a more passive approach and analyzing all the detectives one by one, it might take more time for him to meet light then otherwise. if so, there's a chance Misa actually comes into play before Sherlock can either meet light or acquire his death note. If you're using BBC's Sherlock, then it'd be game over for him, as Misa will most surely know about the smartest detective alive, and his face is in every news paper. (but you did use a weird composite of every version of Sherlock, which I kinda understand, but it's kinda unfair. BBC's Sherlock has a near OP mind palace...tho worth noting it has failed him in the past, and he also would refuse to believe in Shinnigami's until it's absolutely irrefutable, and even then he'd likely be as caught off-guard and as shocked as L did)
and about the last two details you mentioned for how 'Light had given himself away early one', those can actually be explained.(I'll reply to this comment with the explanations).
First off- yes, even if they don't reveal light to be Kira, these moments could very well have served signaled to L that Light very well could be Kira from the start, but I slightly doubt it. he likely was still close to certain early on, but not for these two instances of "light slipping up" as you mention.
1. at that moment, Light is playing the cordial student. I think it's fair to say (based on my little understanding) that Japanese social culture has a bigger emphasis on being respectful/cordial to others, even more so to stranger, and even more so to others of higher authority/rank.(L being the best detective in the world, definitely "out ranking" Light). I believe their entire first interactions are based around this in mind for Light embodying the 'perfect cordial student' act (explaining why he doesn't aggressively question L's deduction leading to light as a suspect, as it could be disrespectful to L's skills and experience. And why he doesn't ask him if he's really L, as it could be seen as Light calling him a liar). Now to the letters: from an innocent perspective, Light assumes L has given him all the information he needed, he wouldn't think L would forget another one and instead assume the other letters either don't exist or aren't important. still- it's enough to be suspicious, just not enough to be indefensible.
2. As for Ray Pember, go back to that exchange again- from an innocent but smart student perspective, all Light did was connect the dots and fill in what L was about to say. He knows he is being suspected, and L brings up the detectives that all died investigating people tied to the NPA, he then specifically mentions Ray to Light, which then allows "innocent but sharp Light" to understand that Ray must have been the one fallowing Light, as it isn't that hard of a connection to make based on L having so much focus on light and L bringing up this one detective. L would have to expect Light to be capable of such deduction, as Light has already proven himself to be quite smart, and wouldn't see any other reason why L would specifically point out one of the detectives by name.
(I will say for that 2nd one, I'd be curious to go to the manga and Japanese phrasing of that conversation. because the anime dub does make it harder to tell for certain if L laid the dots and Light just connected them, or if Light really talked as if he knew who Ray was before L mentioned his name, but I believe it makes sense when viewed in this way, Light just filled in L's thoughts, as it perfectly explains why L didn't make any remark on it, not even an internal one.)
@@jeom3808 yeah seems like he wants homes to win combining all of them
@@tfordham13lmao naw Sherlock slams him L
@@jeom3808naw Sherlock’s better especially with other shite in media he shuts on him L.
@@shifterlocker2361 no not at all
Shiiii I wanna see more Sherlock Holmes content now, obviously want more death note but damn this got me interested
🤝
Yea same I am reading the books currently but I can pay no attention so know I gotta re read the only cases I've have read. There are 2 movies Netflix if you didn't know.
Start by the books bro
I knew Sherlock would win I just wanted to see weather it would take longer than a plank second to solve the case
He can solve the cases with precision down to the nearest Planke Length every Attosecond.
An absolute masterpiece, sad this isn't more popular
needa see scooby and the gang solve the kira case
💀
Unironically they can they found the mystery to what was going on in the middle of no where in the courage the cowardly dog series
I am happy you mentioned Sherlock Holmes ability to comprehend and understand the supernatural. Because some versions or people get it where because he based on deduction and logic any other worldly exception would throw him off or he wouldn't expect that truth. Clearly isn't true if you remove all impossible whatever is left no matter how improbable is the truth
bro this was a great watch. One of the best videos ever
I appreciate it my boy
A Victorian version of Death Note with Sherlock vs Light would be pretty sick.
About Time! Welcome Back!
Good to be back man
1 reply I just gotta reply
I don't think that L is a better Detective than Sherlock Holmes by any stretch of the imagination. The very best tactic a Detective can use is to go undetected by their quarry. And the first thing L did was make himself known to Light. Which was just foolish.
I definitely agree having L show his face and directly stating to light that he was L was extremely dumb in any aspect of law enforcement or criminal investigation
I know why he did it and the creator of the video also explains why he did it too as it stems from his immaturity and also wanting to provoke a reaction from his suspected quarry
I think that decision was more of a Plot Induced Stupidity.
L making himself known to light also helped with the case and it was also used to provoke and get a reaction from Light. Go and check how Light analysed every possible outcome when he got home after L revealed himself to him. Light still doubt it was even the real L, and said that he might have used a body double and other stuff as well.
However that doesn't even justify your point of saying Sherlock is smarter than L. Sherlock never faced any supernatural case like the Kira case and Sherlock failed to solve some cases in his carrier too which were not even close to the Kira case. L never failed to solve any and would've solved the Kira case if not because REM stopped him, REM died because she prevented Misa's death, which means in the future L would've caught Light and Misa and sentenced them to death if REM didn't interfere.
L narrowed down a mass murderer out of 7 billion(entire world) people to one person, without anything to work with (remember how other detectives said they couldn't handle the case where people around the world are dying of heart attack since there was nothing to work with, before they decided to call on L).
@@LhordShepherd In the video it was even stated that Sherlock solved supernatural cases before. Did you even watch it?
This was in INCREDIBLY entertaining video!
Thank you❤️
Breaking Bad fans be like:
"What about Walter White tho?"
Oh yes, the retired chemistry professor turned m3th cook would definitely prove too much for fiction's objectively greatest detective.
Walter whit stomps.
@@8Kazuja8 Very well argued. I think so as well. He is a flawed character trough and trough. He's ego would and has got in the way if things
Walter white is such an idiot. Half of breaking bad is him fixing his own fuckupa
If Sherlock finds the hidden Death Note, then he wouldn't need to deduce anything anymore. He would be the holder of the death note, and would have the information. Also, Light would forget about the Death Note at this point, and he would likely not have the same safeguards he had in place in the story when he intentionally transferred the death note to someone else. At that point, the difficulty would be in being able to authoritatively prove that the Death Note is real, as in order to transfer it to someone else to give them such proof, you would also need to forget about it yourself.
Thats not even how it worked in Death Note.
In DN when the Japanese Task Force saw The Death Note and talked to Rem all they had to do was Touch the DN in order to see her and talk to her.
What you are talking about is claiming ownership of the DN. If you claim the DN as yours and transfer the owner ship to someone else then the person who owned it loses their memories.
Anyone can see the DN, touch it, read what is inside of it, and remember it all, but ownership of the DN is where the amnesia comes into play.
You are not the holder if you just have it, to be the holder you need to kill the current owner
Sherlock kinda has hacks here, he just kinda walks in and already knows everything, I don’t think it would be very interesting to watch them try to play cat and mouse because he literally just knows immediately
7:54 no, that is wrong and a clue that lead to L thinking it was Light. Light killed people that weren't even broadcasted and that lead to L thinking that the killer had either a family member that worked with the police or was working there himself.
20:40 For the sake of clarity I thought it was important to mention that Light's proclamation about Raye Penber and the FBI was during the scene where his Father was in the hospital over a stress induced heart attack.
During that time frame there is a clear transition from night to day seeming to imply that they were already at the hospital for some amount of time and the situation concerning the FBI was explained to him in some amount of detail off screen. A great video all the same though!
Virgin "Can he beat Goku though?" Fan
Vs
Chad "Can he solve Kira/Light case?"
Good video. I do feel a bit weird about you constantly repeating that Sherlock can tell a person’s whole life by just looking at them. That gives the impression that he’s magic. Both Conan Doyle, and Sherlock himself in the novels, constantly say that what Sherlock uses is simple observation and that was my favorite part of reading his methods - understanding what he noticed and how I, as the reader, could have come to the same conclusion (with the example of knowing how tall someone is based on how high up they write on a wall is, being one of my fav examples)
The way he does it in the novels is kind of magic tho...
Like it is inpossible to get that much information of someone in such a little ammount of time as easily as he does it.
@@anyoneatall3488 conan doyle makes it seem real though atleast to me. he points out small but KEY details that sherlock usually sees.
Agreed!
@@yuni3124 even a kids TV show did but than them
@@tfordham13 respond to me once you actually make sense
basically: if Light knows that Sherlock is investigating him, Light wins easily. Sherlock Holmes is a world famous, easily recognisable detective who publicly uses his full name.
If Sherlock is investigating in private, this is flipped and Sherlock would eventually solve the Kira case, lights out for Light.
Sherlock Holmes would look at the indents in Light’s fingers and somehow know he’s written down the names of everyone who died or some shit.
16:35
The only way I see Light "winning" is that he kills himself before Sherlock confronts him with evidence, or Light sacrifices his lifespan to use the shinigami eyes to kill Sherlock. Then again, if Light does this, I dont see him considering this a win as he loathes the idea of using the shinigami eyes himself, if anything, with Sherlock dead, Light would at best see this as a tie and it would gnaw at his mind until the rest of his days.
Yes. Because Light and L are normal genuises, while Sherlock has the knowledge of the plot on hand.
I have no doubt Sherlock could win since death note despite being about a supernatural force, is actually a lot more grounded than Sherlock Holmes. Though I feel like you really should’ve given Light more credit, I think it would’ve taken Sherlock a good while longer to catch Kira. The main thing I think you overlooked is Ryuk, Light would’ve absolutely used him against Sherlock.
Ryuk is a (mostly) neutral observer. Light was rarely able to get his help, and when Light lost to Near, Ryuk killed him.
@@christiancrusader9374 get rid of it
@@blackrangoanthony Technically that wasn't helping Light, that was him giving ownership of the notebook.
@@christiancrusader9374 it's all fun until light uses shinigami eyes
@@thunderstorm99 something he will never use, remember? Light is too arrogant and too much of a coward to make the deal.
I know it sounds CRAZY, but imagine L is working with Sherlock Holmes secretly and Noone except Watari is aware of that.
And the is history.... .
I like these Sherlock matchups. You could do one in which he tries to catch/find the real name of The Joker. Seeing that Batman tie in at the end of the video, it would be fitting.
Not that hard batman knows he know the minute joker appeared but he knows it doesn't matter
To be honest, it only depends on when in Sherlock Holmes' career that he takes on the Kira case. If it's pre-Moriarty, easy GG in favor of Holmes. In the Arthur Conan Doyle novels, he consistently shrugs off notoriety for solving his cases, pretending that inspectors LeStrade or Gregson did all of the work.
Post-Moriarty, Holmes becomes more well known to the general public and thus is easier for someone with a Death Note to deal with. At that point, it depends on whether Holmes wants to openly investigate the case or go deep undercover, something absolutely in his skill set since he convinced the world he was dead for years until he chose to come out of hiding.
It’s hard for humans to solve super nature case, especially when it deals with memory erase and killing someone without having to be there will be really hard.
It's all fun and games until Light writes down his own name, with the description of "Killed by the heat death of the universe"
There's a rule in the death note that conditions that are not physically possible would just result in the victim dying of a heart attack.
@@Dhairya3333 Not just that, but you also can't make a victim's cause of death cause the deaths of others as well.
The big question is could columbo solve the Kira case?
Short answer: yes
Long answer: Light wouldn't even be able to use the death note on columbo's dog due to it not having a name. Columbo would bumble persistently until either Light plays his hand arrogantly or panics and incriminates himself.
This would actually be genius, because Colombo's strongest trait is playing off peoples ego's, they think he is an idiot, with an ego as big as Lights, he wouldn't even see Colombo as a threat until its too late.
Sherlock is more of a high functioning sociopath
Light is smart but he’s way too emotional and tends to get sloppy from time to time. He literally exposed his location in the second episode because he got pissed off and tried to kill L for no reason.
He could solve it, but his situation is different from Ls.
Light would easily know his name due to his fame and his face would be in the papers.
Ls case is coincidentally apt to fight Kira since he has no recorded identity and has never shown his face or given his real name, otherwise Light would have killed him much earlier in the series, and that was the dilemma in the series for how Light was going to take him out without the shinigami eyes. Sherlock absolutely has the capacity to solve it but I believe he wouldn't get the chance.
Best.
Everything are analysed, genius
Sherklock Holmes has assended to be the pinical of detective work in fiction, so light doesnt really stand a chance.
You should try a among us detective next💀
With sensible players, Light actually might have a chance.
With average players, however, Light could do everything right and still get ejected due to a half-baked accusation of “being sus.”
They would be accusing random people that werent doing tasks, eventually catching onto light, light would need a way to kill the amogus guy, having to see their real face, of course, light, being a student, he can do tasks and if possible, accuse the amogus guy back in case he is the next target. First of all, he needs people so light cant be "ejected". Then seem less suspicious, and he will have a chance at winning
so in short: Light would lose because he's (atleast to some degree) grounded in reality (minus the deathnote of course) unlike sherlock,bats and other detectives with inhuman abilities. plus light died because he was childish and prideful which dummed him down
Sherlock Holmes absolutely does not have superhuman abilities, at least the original one doesn't. Kinda the point is that anyone could do this, he just has spent a lot of time and energy on doing it on top of having a lot of knowledge.
Sherlock Holmes is all about reality, because he follows logic, that's why there are cases he couldn't solve, because sometimes you just don't have enough facts available.
Dude I just wanna say u deserve more
Your work is just awesome
As soon as Sherlock Holmes even sees Light, he's already gonna know his background or something and immediately know if anything is off. He just always kinda does that I don't even know how, but he's definitely pulling that kind of bullshit, I already know.
Y’all don’t understand Sherlock Holmes is a beast. He’s a beast you cannot beat him
8:55 Eeeeeh, sort of. Unless called out for being the monster he is, Light tends to keep calm and think carefully about the pros and cons of nearly every action. For example, he knew if he just killed Raye Penber he would be fucked, because he was only one of 12 Private Eyes sent to various suspects. He knew he had to kill 12 birds with one stone, hence the elaborate scheme to trick him into writing the names of his compatriots into the Death Note after the other elaborate scheme to get his name.
Sherlock my fav character in fiction. Thanks for making this
Kira wouldnt change the pattern of his killings in this case because as you said, it wasnt a battle of pride at that point
7:18 Astronomy? Sherlock literally didn't know that the Earth revolved around the Sun as it "wouldn't make a pennyworth of a difference to him or his work".
lmaoo wow thats actually funny
He has NIL knowledge on anything not pertaining to Crime
If it was Auguste Dupin he would see Light and say: "Yeah! He is Kira, look how he sees his watch all the time and how he can't keep a straight face for a second without going into introspection to get out of this situation."
This only holds true if Light fights how he fights L. Light only let out clues so he could get close to L, if Sherlock doesn't challenge him, Light wouldn't let out a lot of these clues
this is technically wrong.
Light have a lot of telltale sign.
the worst is being Light himself is a telltale sign .
I mean and the original Sherlock was literally high on cocaine all the time so he would be way more agressive than L
Ight as a Sherlock Holmes fan I have read all the books watched all the films light cannot beat him
um wasn't L supposed to be Sher L ock. and Watari was Watson. was pretty obvious when i watched it that it was an adaptation of Sherlock. Kira is Moriarty, math genius, twisted moral compass, etc.
LET'S GOOO!!! watching this rn
15:00 Yes, he knows about the position of ALLL the stars in the sky yet he didn't know the earth orbits the sun, welp
Light wouldn't just kill Sherlock Holmes if Holmes isn't on Light's radar. Holmes is a consultant. People come to him for advice. So people will be working on the frontline for Holmes. In fact, Holmes would use a persona like L did. Distracting him from Sherlock Holmes to (Alternate Personality).
Either way, Sherlock Holmes is far smarter than Light. I read all the original stories and watched Death Note over 20 times. Huge fan of both. But it's not even close.
wrong, light is smarter, you have bias and you are not smart lol
@@realist3977You didn't read anything about Sherlock.😂
@@uaiu67Lol, what did he say? He deleted his comment.
@@realist3977I read all 4 Sherlock novels and all 56 stories.
I watched the entire Death Note anime and also read the entire manga several times + How To Read Vol. 13, L Changes The World, BB Case, etc.
I can guarantee you that Sherlock is way, way above Light intellectually.
Sherlock would dismantle Light's facade very easily...
@@Fran-tf6rz nope you're ignorant
the thing with L dragging the case on is comepletly wrong. I've seen this exact argument too many times. From L's Point of view it looked like Light was finishing his thought process who would just randomly talk to suspect about a FBI agent who has been killed by him? ofc he tells the suspect about that becouse he was suspicious Light just finished his train of thought. Many people with above average intelligence could end that train of thought. and for the 3 cards you mentioned. L wants to have full blown proof yes it was suspicious and Light did fuck up there but he didnt blunder it to the point of being 100% Kira he just made himself more suspicious
Idk maybe Sherlock would instantly take the false bottom up and the notebook burns up like the trap works, I mean that was the point of why light made that trap in the first place
Wow this is a well scripted video keep it up and the background sound is just fire
I come bearing a humble request... could we have a "could Columbo solve death note" video, because while its obviously a Columbo W i need to see it
the fun thing is that anybody that could hack the police computers could get the information so neither L nor Sherlock could be sure that Kira is related to the police. this is something that the manga decides based on plot needs but in real life that could cause more harm than good. if you aren't directly related to the police, Sherlock (or L) would be doomed.
knowing this, Sherlock would never assume that Kira is directly related to the police so he wouldn't be able to find Light.
let's not talk about the "I found that the first murder happened in japan because of reasons" or that sherlock wouldn't know how kira kills. there's no reason for sherlock to try to find a death note in kira's bedroom since he doesn't know you need to use a notebook to kill. or that a regular pen, mixed with other regular pens, is a "key" to open the secret compartment where the notebook is.
Well they noted all these murders where done on publicly available people and in fact they purposely used lind L Taylor a person who records where kept within the police too trick light. Therefore light doesn't have access to thid information yet he does have access to specific information regarding his own investigation? A investigation that would probably be kept more secure if not just done on paper. Not to mention further that L at least wanted to stur up issues and suspension so he could A drag the FBI into helping him and B make sure the taskforce was left only with people he could trust completely.
@@Fairenough642 in fact, kira didn't kill Taylor for being a criminal. he killed him because Taylor claimed to be L and that he would find kira and bring him to "justice".
kira didn't had any non public information about taylor.
L only found where to use the Tailor scam because he so happened to know, based on nothing, that kira was in japan. because, lets be real. if you count criminals around the whole world, within a several days frame, it's not impossible that more than one dies of heart attack. that would make L's "I knew who was the first victim" an absurd.
L doesn't has enough criminals to play a city by city Taylor scam around the whole world. there was also the chance that kira didn't kill taylor so fast. if Kira had writen something on the lines of "Lind L. Taylor dies of heart attack in two days" L's plan would be ruined.
@@WilliamWizer I know thats what I said, I was making a point about the idea that the other person said "light could have been a hacker who hacked the police that's how he knew about him being thought of too be a highschooler." but the lind l taylor thing in part proved that he did not have none public available criminals records otherwise he could have known it was not really l and not just kill him so fast. that's what L said then and there so therefore light had no secret police records he was no hacker yet he did have secret information in the taskforce therefore light is someone in or around someone in the taskforce its not a plot hole from what I can see. Light could have made the death 2 days later but A it could have been hidden if he did that he wanted to see L die so he knew it was well L real name and B he wanted to make a show and say "no one come after me look I killed the real l live as he called me out" and C he was not going to do it until L called him out on his views of justice and he got emotional. He had yet to feel fear or on the back foot so he kinda thought he was not touchable. What I have more issue with Is light killing the FBI agents there was no real good reason too and it only hurt him from what i could see i mean sure he wanted to sew decient in the ranks but he could have done it in a more subtle way
@@Fairenough642 I won't say that it's a plot hole. it's just that L's trick worked because he knew that Kira was from japan and he knew it... because no reason. plot just ignores the fact that heart attack isn't that uncommon worldwide. any criminal that died of heart attack in any part of the world could had been Kira's first test but L, by miracle of plot convenience, knew it was the guy that died in japan.
L's Taylor stunt only worked because, by miracle of plot convenience, Light decided that he had to kill a non-criminal (for the first time) in fear of being found knowing that he can't be found.
in fact, Kira wanted to be seen as a force of justice so killing the detective in public would only hurt his image and does nothing good since nobody can prove he is kira. but, by miracle of plot convenience kira breaks his "rule" of killing only criminals to get rid of a detective.
and yes. Kira could had been far more subtle with the FBI. he has the power to control people's actions before the die and can define the cause of death. he only had to take care of one of them and not with a heart attack. control what he does or doesn't do so he reports you aren't suspicious and then make him die of accident three days later.
who cares abut the other FBI? I was tailed, that agent decided I'm innocent, that's all.
@@WilliamWizer he suspected he was in japan so he started there, the reason was his first victim was a criminal doing a crime who suddenly died of a random heart attack mid crime. it was the most suspisios death and the first one to happen so its a safe beat to guess japan. L also said he did not expect things to go so well he might have had back up plans and ideas
The goat finally posted💯
Can you do Sherlock Holmes vs the Phantom of the Opera (book version) or Mr. Hyde?
Yo this was aMAZing!😁
The fact that this takes half its script from Seths Video makes this feel like some sort of parallel universe
Its still interesting; But could definitely have benefitted from more personalization/changes to stand out
sherlock and columbo: exist
light:why do i hear boss music?
Could you do a opposite on this, where L tries to solve and arrest Professor Moriarty?
Sherlock Holmes is so broken it's crazy like this batman on his best days type level of deduction skills
Whens part 2 of this ? I wanna watch more videos like this
I tend not to be impressed easily by people's intelligence, but within the first chapter of the sign of the four (if I'm remembering correctly), I found Sherlock Holmes to be a genius. It was the pocket watch deduction where he was able to tell so much about Dr. Watsons brother, without ever even knowing he had a brother beforehand, and he explained how he deducted it. I haven't read every book, only 2 plus part of the sign of the four.
Are you sure you're not confusing the list of things Holmes has NO knowledge of (because they're not related to criminology and he believes his brain won't have room for everything) with a list of things he has knowledge in? Even in the modern series when he knew a star in a painting was in the wrong place, the joke was that he'd just gained that information and had to admit it was useful.
With the help of Mycroft, Sherlock would solve the case in probably a week tbh , thats how long he took to solve the Sign of Four case. He will deduce who it is very easily and then take his own time to find evidence.
About him not being in Japan; Holmes has a lot of 'fans' around the world , like one in france that is memtioned once , so it wouldnt be far too deduce he has contacts on japan (on a modern-setting of course)
Sherlock IS well known , but not enough for Light to known him
What is the background music ? It's really cool.
I'd like to know too
I'd like to see Sherlock versus a telepathic criminal. That would be something
Holmes would demolish Light in every way. Yes I've read the books and no I'm not being biased. I love Death Note and Holmes equally but Light makes too many mistakes that L missed that Holmes would not let slide. Simple.
It stands to reason that Light would have read illustrated Sherlock Holmes novels as well, so he would know his real name, face and his absolutely incredible abilities. What if Light thought that Sherlock Holmes was too dangerous to live and out of mere pure precaution killed him?
What happens if Sherlock hunts down Johan(Monster), or even Magase(Babylon)?
Sherlock is smarter than both & could deduce who they are and maybe their motives but I think they’d both just kill him
Sherlock would instantly gather that A) The killer is a student in the Kanto Region, and B) He only kills those whose name and face are made public, but he wouldn't suspect supernatural means until a crime scene investigation and and possibly an autopsy.
"Notice anything, Watson?"
"Nothing out of the ordinary."
"Exactly."
This video makes me want to get into Sherlock Holmes
Sherlock Holmes would solve the Kira case because all of the cases he solved led back to family members, so he'd have at least a 50/50 chance, which is WAY better odds than he's had before.
I do think that light could outwit him, I mean Moriarty did it too
Moriarty is million times smarter than light
@@rulas___1790 I think it depends on which version of Moriarty you choose
@@user-zb8hc2im4e This video is strongly based on the books, there Moriarty is one of the only people to ever live who could contend with a mind like Holmes.
Holmes is given detective plot armor where he makes discoveries without a justifiable amount of evidence or proof to inspire it. He just knows shit.
Of course he’d win
And yet he is still the most well written detective way better than this eastern anime pedo shit.
Will the part 2 for dbs powerscaling come
Yes
As a Victorian era "man of science", Holmes is at a substantial disadvantage over many more intuitive detectives. By his own admission he is incredibly ignorant outside his area of expertise.
Make no mistake, if he can wrap his head around the truth of what is happening, he solves the case faster than anyone, but his motto "once you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains however improbable is correct" could backfire.
Sherlock gets the advantage because he's up front about the few cases he's lost (I believe it's five times by men and once by a woman, which may or may not include Irene Adler). He's proud but not so proud as to boast that he's never lost, or that some people (like his brother) are far better than he. Also, for the record, he officially lost against the KKK, but I'd give him a pass on that one.
Light no diffs, not because Sherlock couldn't figure out who Kira is, but because SH is a public figure and doesnt use an alias in in his cannon, and Lights dad gets put on the Kira task force.
All he'd have to do is hear his dad say that he's on the task force with Sherlock Holmes and Light can just look him up on Wikipedia 🤷♂️
Great video but you mispronounce ‘Baskervilles’, the ‘villes’ part is pronounced like ‘villain’
you've convinced me to read sherlock holmes