Prior to release, the game was sent by the publisher to
Future Publishing's
Amiga Power magazine, to be reviewed by Jonathan Nash in issue 51. Whilst playing he found an error which prevented progression through the game (at the start, the
bellhop would not relinquish the door key). He informed the publisher which resulted in the game release being delayed for several months as, at the time, the game had been sent to the disk duplication factory ready for reproduction. As it was also too late to change the magazine content and layout, the issue went to press with an apology that they had unintentionally reviewed an "unfinished" game, which was against one of their policies. The screenshots for the issue came from the PC version, also against their policy. The front cover of this issue featured an artist's impression of the 'escape from Rio' car chase scene. The Amiga version has no voices, whereas the MS-DOS CD version is a
talkie with full voice-acting. The voice of the Temple Guardian was provided by British actress
Penelope Keith. Actor
William Hootkins, who played Red Six (Jek Porkins) in
Star Wars, also voiced a number of characters. The MS-DOS CD version contains a
minigame of sorts. The file Queen.1 (1.82MB,
CRC-32: D72DCD56) is found in the INTERVIE folder in the CD-ROM's Root. The minigame is a fully playable adventure game, where the main character tries to get an interview from the game's development team. In March 2004, the game was released as
freeware, and support for it was added to
ScummVM, allowing it to be played on
Linux,
Mac OS X,
Windows, and many other operating systems and consoles. The datafiles for both the
floppy disk and
CD-ROM version are available from the ScummVM website. The
Fedora RPM software repository has an installer for the game alongside ScummVM. This game is directly included in the
Debian software repository. In 2009, iPhSoft took ScummVM's FOTAQ
iPhone /
iPod Touch free port and modified it. This modification has been commercially sold on
iTunes but was discontinued in mid-2015 due to lack of iOS 8 and up support. In 2013, the game was released at GOG.com as a digital download ready to play on modern PCs. In March 2016, MojoTouch, working with John Passfield, the designer of the original game, released the 20th Anniversary Edition on the
App Store (iOS),
Google Play and
Amazon Appstore. This version includes improved graphics rendering, full voice acting, new touch interface, auto-save, multi-language support, high definition menus and the following bonus material: Making of Flight of the Amazon Queen booklet, a play through of the interactive interview minigame with audio commentary by John Passfield, the original game manuals (both US and international versions) and the Official Playing Guide. On 14 May 2024 it was released on
Sega Dreamcast by World of Games Publishing. == Reception ==