1. The people who really love Easel right now are teenagers who have mastered Scratch and are looking for more. Expert game devs who come from Unity or other programming languages find it’s missing some capability they really want and tend to get frustrated right now. I’ve been solving so many issues every month, like we got multiple cameras the other month for example, but there’s so much left. If I made a standalone version now, no one would buy it because it doesn’t yet do what they need, and if you did I would probably be refunding you quite soon. We might need another 6-12 months to be ready for experts. Sign up to the mailing list and we can keep you updated.
2. I would be willing to go as far as source available to licensees but there’s are some practical issues with fully open source. First, it makes it easier to cheat at all Easel games. Easel is client authoritative for certain things. Why? So I can keep the server costs within what I can actually afford because I am one person. Maybe once I can afford 30 servers we can make it all server authoritative and I won’t worry about this anymore. Second, I expect a net decrease in my productivity if I have to argue and defend my code, and become the BDFL to the open internet all the time in an open source environment. I’ve been really really productive just working by myself.
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