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Aureal Vortex2 SuperQuad Digital

Aureal Semiconductor · 1999 · PCI Sound Card
Wavetracing was Aureal's ace in the hole, but the driver roulette kept this reference board from being a no-brainer.
2.0
Average
POCG VERDICT
Headphone 3D that made me look over my shoulder, but the quad-speaker gaps and frame rate hits keep it grounded.
The Vortex2's wavetracing is the real deal for two-speaker gaming, but until Aureal fixes the driver bottlenecks, four-speaker users should think twice.
About This Hardware

The Aureal Vortex2 SuperQuad Digital is a PCI sound card built around the AU8830 chip, often referred to as the Vortex2. It was Aureal's second-generation 3D audio accelerator, designed to push A3D 2.0 with wavetracing and compete directly with Creative Labs' Sound Blaster Live. Unlike retail cards from Diamond or Turtle Beach, this is the reference board: a bare, no-frills design that served as a template for OEM partners. It lacks a fancy box or bundled software, but it packs the full AU8830 feature set. The card is tiny, barely longer than a PCI slot, with three colour-coded internal MPC3 connectors and a standard game/MIDI port. External jacks, however, are unmarked, a minor annoyance.

The chipset offers 92 hardware DirectSound streams, A3D 2.0 with 76 total voices (16 direct sources and 60 reflections for wavetracing), a 320-voice wavetable synth (64 in hardware), and a high-quality AC'97 codec with a rated SNR better than 100 dB. S/PDIF optical output is present, and sample rates go up to 48 kHz. The driver situation was always a work in progress; the reference board shipped with pre-release 2030 drivers that limited quad-speaker 3D streams to just 16, with the rest falling back to software, a glaring bottleneck. Community efforts have since delivered more stable packages, but getting wavetracing and the full feature set working under modern operating systems remains a challenge. For DOS enthusiasts the Vortex2 offers excellent Sound Blaster Pro compatibility and a wavetable header, though its real strength was always positional 3D audio in Windows 98 games.

Specifications
InterfacePCI
Audio ProcessorAureal Vortex2 AU8830
DirectSound Streams92 hardware-accelerated streams
A3D 2.0 Voices76 (16 direct sources + 60 reflections)
Wavetable Synthesizer320-voice, 64-voice hardware
Sample RateUp to 48 kHz playback / record
SNR>100 dB A-weighted
Outputs2x stereo line-out, S/PDIF optical
Inputs2x line-in / microphone
Game/MIDI Port15-pin D-sub
Internal Connectors3x MPC3 (CD, AUX, TAD), wavetable header
Hardware Info
ManufacturerAureal Semiconductor
CategoryPCI Sound Card
Released1999
MSRP$70 estimated street price (reference board, no official MSRP)
ReviewedJune 14, 2026
How to Get One Today
Price
MSRP: $70 estimated street price (reference board, no official MSRP)
Notes & Warnings
This is the reference design, not a retail card. Most Vortex2 AU8830 units you'll find today are rebranded OEM versions from Diamond (Monster Sound MX300), Turtle Beach (Montego II), or others. True reference boards are rare; expect to pay $30-60 on eBay depending on condition and included bracket. Capacitor leakage is a concern on all cards from this era, so inspect photos carefully. Windows 98/ME drivers are essential; the final Aureal reference drivers (4.06.2048) are the best starting point, and community packs like the 'VXD drivers for Aureal Vortex' archive add stability. For a modern retro build, a PCI slot with native DOS/Windows 98 is required. The card does not work properly in pure DOS without TSRs for Sound Blaster compatibility. If you need full wavetracing, stick to Windows 98 and supported A3D 2.0 games; later community drivers for Windows XP break many of these features.
Editor's Note
Restored from the POCG archive and rewritten in the Maniac voice. The original GameStats review by GrandTrain awarded a score of 40%, which converts to 2.0/5 on POCG's scale.