It was sold as a bundle which included an ISA sound card, a microphone, a pair of headphones and a software package.
[2] In addition, the WSS featured RCA analog audio outputs, an uncommon feature among sound cards of this era; other connections were a microphone input, a stereo line input and a stereo headphone output.
WSS was based on the Analog Devices AD1848 codec chip and had an on-board Yamaha YMF262-M (OPL3) FM synthesis sound chip for MIDI playback[1] (supporting up to 18 simultaneous MIDI voices).
They introduced single-mode DMA, supported games in MS-DOS, Ad Lib and Sound Blaster emulation.
[4] WSS 2.0 drivers, released in October 1993, added support for OEM sound cards (Media Vision, Creative Labs, ESS Technology) and included an improved DOS driver (WSSXLAT.EXE) that provided Sound Blaster 16 compatibility for digital sampling.