Don’t Waste Your Time On This Serial Killer Miniseries Dud

Channel 5’s The Game, which is now available in the US via BritBox, stars some very talented actors and kicks off with a promising premise. Then it squanders all of this on a preposterous plot that resembles nothing so much as swiss cheese by the end. Supposedly intelligent characters behave in spectacularly stupid ways. It’s further dragged down by far too many irritating genre tropes to count. Spoilers ahead.

The Game is basically a “game of cat and mouse” between two men, one an ex-cop and one almost certainly the elusive serial killer known as the Ripton Stalker.

Jason Watkins plays Huw Miller, a man who we learn went through something of a nervous breakdown in his hunt for the killer. He retires, though the failure to apprehend the true killer (compounded by the arrest of the wrong man) still haunts him. He lives with his wife, Alice (Sunetra Sarker). His relationship with his daughter, Margot (Indy Lewis) is strained from the years spent on the investigation.

Robson Green plays Patrick Harbottle, a charming repairman who moves in across the street after the sudden death – ruled a suicide, but very suspect – of Huw’s friend and neighbor, Frank (Gordon Kennedy).

Huw and Patrick hit it off at first, but when they part from a night of drinks, Patrick says “Catch you later,” echoing the words the serial killer uttered to Huw when the detective nearly caught him three years prior. From here on out, Huw begins to investigate Patrick, convinced that he’s the Ripton Stalker. Patrick, meanwhile, begins ingratiating himself with the neighbors and with Alice, and later Margot.

The setup is pretty compelling, but what follows is a mess. Let’s go over some of the many, many ways this show drops the proverbial ball.

Huw Is A Terrible Detective

Huw is supposed to be a genius detective. We see an example of this in a pub scene when his friend, Paul (Scott Karim) asks him to do his “trick” which is to basically see every detail in a room and commit it to memory. He’s able to describe everything going on, the other patrons and so forth without looking. But Huw is not a very good detective at all. At one point he’s talking to the man wrongfully accused of being the Stalker who lets slip a key clue that I picked up on immediately. Huw missed this very obvious clue until much later, when replaying a recording of their conversation. Huw is such a bumbling nincompoop, you begin to wonder why Patrick ever bothered to torment him in the first place.

Worse, Huw is a total mess all the time. When his wife and daughter confront him about going off the deep end, he stutters and stammers and makes excuses and falls all over himself to apologize. He seems so nutty and unhinged that it’s unsurprising when his family and neighbors, and even his former police colleagues, think he’s lost his marbles.

Huw is also a terrible planner, placing himself in dangerous situations for no discernible reason, refusing to ask for help or call the police at times when calling the police is the most glaringly obvious move, and generally not communicating with anyone. I began to intensely dislike Huw by the third episode, frustrated as more and more of these issues piled up. Huw comes across as weak, desperate and clueless. I remember thinking, it’s rare to watch a detective show starring someone so bad at their job. But annoyance soon turned into something else. Soon enough, I found myself despising the man.

Huw Gets People Killed For No Reason

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/erikkain/2026/01/28/the-game-uk-series-britbox-review/