In the DOS era, most games accessed sound hardware directly. Embedding QSound in the BIOS allowed motherboard manufacturers (e.g., Intel, ASUS, Acer) to offer “enhanced audio” without a dedicated sound card. The BIOS intercepted calls to the PC speaker or simple audio hardware and processed them through QSound algorithms before output.
QSound used proprietary psychoacoustic algorithms (HRTF—Head-Related Transfer Function) to trick the human ear into perceiving sound sources outside the physical speaker placement. By manipulating phase, frequency, and timing, it created a virtual “soundstage” where instruments or effects seemed to come from left, right, center, and even beyond or between the speakers—all without needing two separate audio channels beyond standard stereo. qsound bios
What is QSound BIOS? The QSound BIOS was a software-based audio enhancement system developed by QSound Labs, integrated directly into the BIOS of certain PC motherboards in the early-to-mid 1990s. Unlike hardware-based sound cards (like the Sound Blaster series), the QSound BIOS provided 3D audio positioning and stereo enhancement using only the PC’s existing internal speaker or a basic stereo output. In the DOS era, most games accessed sound hardware directly