The DOS port of King's Quest II uses the same engine from the DOS port of the first game. King's Quest II: Romancing the Throne also begins the King's Quest tradition of using puns for subtitles. Using the powers of the magic mirror, Graham finds a suitable bride in the land of Kolyma, but getting to her is no easy matter. After saving the kingdom of Daventry and becoming king, Graham now seeks a queen to keep him company and father his children. King's Quest II: Romancing the Throne is a graphical adventure game developed and published by Sierra On-Line in 1987 and sequel to King's Quest: Quest For the Crown (DOS). If these do ever surface, the collection will be updated.For other games in the series see King's Quest.
We made an edit from the various versions of the game (Macintosh, PC, various language versions, etc.) and used some noise removal tools to remove as much SFX as possible. NOTE: We were not able to locate the original high-quality versions of the music for the introduction and ending videos. The archival soundtrack series contains all known music from said title, including 1 second jingles, unused music, beta versions, and more. Therefore, no notation data is lost through polyphony limitations and the tracks may be heard at their fullest. Due to the hardware limitations of the SC-55 causing polyphony problems, if necessary, each channel has been recorded independently and then merged into a single track.
The music, having originally been composed using the Roland Sound Canvas SC-55, has been recorded directly from the original archived MIDI files using an authentic SC-55. Recorded with an authentic Roland SC-55 from the original archived MIDI files.
Produced by Andrew Harrington and Neal Grandstaff.