Trivia
Chris Braymen, the game's composer, quoted a Gregorian chant (Dies Irae) in the theme that plays when Prince Alexander is captured in the Catacombs of the Isle of the Sacred Mountain. It's a famous theme, quoted as well in many classical compositions such as Berlioz' Symphonie fantastique (5th part), in Stanley Kubrick's films The Shining and A Clockwork Orange, and also in Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis (Room of the God Machine).
King's Quest VI: Heir Today, Gone Tomorrow was ported to the Amiga by Revolution Software, though the company wasn't credited on the box or in the manual.
Back cover of the Amiga version contains information: "Beautiful graphics in 256 colours or 32 colours (two versions available)." but the game was released only in 32 colours version.
According to KQ VI reviews in Amiga Computing, Amiga Format and Amiga Power magazines Sierra originally planned to release also 256 colours version but decided that 32 colours version looked so good already so they shelved the idea.
King's Quest VI's villain is named Abdul Alhazred; this name was taken from the work of horror and sci-fi writer H.P. Lovecraft. Abdul was a fictional character (also dubbed ''the Mad Arab'') who wrote the Necronomicon.
Contributed by
Jiguryo (36) on Dec 26, 2006.
- The CD version of King's Quest 6 included "Girl in the Tower" , the theme song to the game, composed by Mark Seibert. A sample of it can be heard on the floppy version for five seconds, then the game urges you to ring up radio stations that was listed in the manual and request it.
- KQ6's introduction was also extended in the CD version.
Contributed by
Black Wolf (37235) on Jul 29, 2001.
This was Sierra's first adventure game to feature their lipsyncing technology that they got when they bought out Bright Star Technology.