trancejeremy
Adventurer
It might be tacky, but OTOH, it might be the only way to go.
When my review of the old Spycraft was up on RPG.net, in which I had mentioned 3rd party Spycraft support, I heard from a few small-ish publishers that they had tried, but AEG was not particularly interested in working with them. Which is somewhat understandable from AEG's point of view (sort of, all the companies I heard from were PDF, so not really competing with AEG's products, except in a general sense), but sucks from the consumer/fans.
Also, how different is it than doing stuff for d20 Future? AFAIK, there is no license that lets companies use "d20 Future" like they can d20 Modern or the D&D PHB in advertising. Most companies just sort of dodge around it (like what's implied here). I don't see anyone is losing by it. The opposite. The only real difference is that WOTC is huge, and AEG is not so huge (but not exactly small, at least for an RPG company)
When my review of the old Spycraft was up on RPG.net, in which I had mentioned 3rd party Spycraft support, I heard from a few small-ish publishers that they had tried, but AEG was not particularly interested in working with them. Which is somewhat understandable from AEG's point of view (sort of, all the companies I heard from were PDF, so not really competing with AEG's products, except in a general sense), but sucks from the consumer/fans.
Also, how different is it than doing stuff for d20 Future? AFAIK, there is no license that lets companies use "d20 Future" like they can d20 Modern or the D&D PHB in advertising. Most companies just sort of dodge around it (like what's implied here). I don't see anyone is losing by it. The opposite. The only real difference is that WOTC is huge, and AEG is not so huge (but not exactly small, at least for an RPG company)