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Friday, July 27, 2018 - 16:07

Having a hard time following what you're saying. What games are you referring to? Links, please.

Tuesday, July 24, 2018 - 11:38

No response. Removing duplicate.

Friday, July 20, 2018 - 17:58

Is this basically a duplicate of https://opengameart.org/node/55336 ?

Friday, July 20, 2018 - 11:09

Yes, you may use LPC assets in a commercial project so long as you do the following:

  1. give credit (list all the authors in your project's credit screen or credits.txt file)
  2. make the art available (the LPC art has to be accessable- in a usable format- to all your users)
  3. share any derivatives (any art you make that is based on the LPC art has to be licensed the same way: CC-BY-SA and GPL)
Thursday, July 19, 2018 - 02:28

subscribed. 

... and bumped.

Tuesday, July 17, 2018 - 18:17

Yeah, looks like it. Sorry.

Hah! Well, the analog loophole is analogous to the difference between open-licensed and fair-use. People could use many assets under fair-use, but that doesn't make them openly-licensed. Yes, you could do that, but submitting such things on OGA would get a raised eyebrow from me. :)

Tuesday, July 17, 2018 - 17:40

The Flecktarn ones (#4, #5), as well as the Tigerstripe (#2) are most likely subject to the Berne convention under German and Republic of Viet Nam governments, respectively. The "tundra" variant of the ERDL pattern (#3) may be public domain, but I'll have to do some more research. I haven't seen #1 or #6 before, but they look like Mil-tec proprietary. Sorry. :/

Tuesday, July 17, 2018 - 17:16

Some are trademarked, yes. For example "Realtree" has a trademarked camo pattern. Most generic ones are not trademarked, but it depends on what you consider "generic". Do you know the clothing brand in the images? If they're official US military fatigues, it still depends because the newer gear is commissioned by a private clothing firm that may have a trademark on the pattern. I should be able to give a better answer after seeing the picture, though.

Friday, July 13, 2018 - 17:30

Ah. I see. I was mostly referring to DA's ability to afford the development costs of a custom app. 

If the features of an app are predomenantly about compact layout, it may be more efficient to create a mobile version of OGA rather than an app.

Friday, July 13, 2018 - 11:43

I see evidence of forum RSS feeds in the site backend, but nothing for submissions. Since the art submission component of the site is custom to OGA, there is not really a prepackaged RSS/Atom plugin for it. I'm sure it's possible, but it would need to be coded custom as well. We'll have to keep that in mind if/when we get the site code open to collaborative development. :)

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