
In fact, were it not for the roman numerals in the title, one would be forgiven for thinking this an upgraded remake. It's so superior that playing the first game is such a big step backwards that there's no real need to ever play it again. I played the hell out of it just under 20 years ago (I got the budget re-release) and I found myself getting back into it quite nicely. And walking remains as slow and tedious as an asthmatic at the London marathon, but EarthSiege II is still one of the all-time classic games ever to grace the home computer. It still suffers from an overly complex control scheme that just about manages to be logical once you take the time to get used to it. The lack of music doesn't dampen the gameplay at all, which is essentially a refined and superior continuation of the first game. It works brilliantly on both systems too, although there's unfortunately no support for CD audio ( NOTE - the new CC update has the full game complete with CD audio working for all systems thanks to some masterful DOSBox trickery). I ummed and erred about whether to include that version or not but instead, I went with DOSBox and the powerful (if a little unstable) Windows '95 emulation. Worse than that, it crashes the entire system forcing you into a hard reset! I played EarthSiege II this way for the longest time in those halcyon days pre-Windows 10 and even intended to include it on this site, but alas it doesn't work on Micro$oft's latest wonder/blunder.

Their installer rips the audio to mp3 and allows for the complete experience with CD-less play. For Windows 7 users, I recommend finding a copy complete with CD audio and follow the instructions on the Sierra Help Pages.


The downside to this is that it's a pain in the ass to get working on modern systems. Despite an underpowered Windows 3.1 version available in some markets, I wouldn't be surprised if it was the cause of many an upgrade to the new operating system. But EarthSiege II was their first high profile game with a separate release exclusively for Windows '95. Publisher Sierra On-Line was mostly a company that catered for consumers with computers of a variety of specifications supporting DOS when most had long since left it behind. The gameplay is pretty much unchanged from the first game but boy did it look sublime.

EarthSiege II was HUGE when it was released in 1996, garnering mostly scores in the top ten percentile.
