In addition the ShadowRun license is more complicated because Topps owns the brand, and AFAIK Microsoft still owns a version of the electronic rights.
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In addition the ShadowRun license is more complicated because Topps owns the brand, and AFAIK Microsoft still owns a version of the electronic rights.
Yeah, I wish there was a legally recognized distinction (for licensing purposes) between a computerized game aid (which is pretty much what Fantasy Grounds is) and a computer game. But apparently, the lawyers don't see it as such.
Take a look at the original d20 license, It completely wiped out computer supported character creation tools like PCGen, because we had random generation of the hitoints and ability scores. We were compliant for a couple of versions and decided that it was too restrictive and dropped it and just stayed OGL compliant.