But from what I have heard here, the license is now limited strictly to
EA. They paid extra for exclusivity. Similar to the Daytona track contract
Sega had. Even tho Papyrus had a fully functional Daytona track, they
couldn't release it due to the track's licensing agreements with Sega. And,
in fact, because Papyrus knew that someday they would have to bargain with
Daytona to get track licensing rights(when the exclusive Sega deal expired),
Papyrus had to police the N2/N99 track builders themselves to keep home-made
versions of Daytona from showing up on the net.
dave henrie