Important News: Reallusion Content EULA Updated (Effective August 1st, 2025)

Update to Reallusion Content EULA (Effective August 1st, 2025)

With over two decades of innovation and collaboration with top developers, Reallusion has built a colossal library of 200,000+ premium assets. For our 25th anniversary, we’re proud to unveil an enhanced Content Policy that unlocks creative superpowers for individuals, studios, and enterprises.

This update redefines how users access, use, and manage content, delivering a more flexible, powerful, affordable, and streamlined experience. We are confident that this strategic adjustment will enhance the user content experience and drive revenue growth for our content developers. Thank you for your continued support.

Please note the following update:

An upgraded Standard License has been added under Term 2.1, and the Extended License has been removed.

See the EULA for details. Know More

Hello anyone confused or understanding the new EULA,

Well, my heart was all set to purchase about $1500 worth of software. After reading the EULA, I don’t see how to legally use any Reallusion solutions legally as a resource to help me. My desire to showcase a custom size of an original product design through the help of using Reallusion software to help me make size adjustments to an original Zbrush file seems impossible to showcase together on the internet, due to the EULA. The 3D printing of the dimensions of that product would be potentially changed by an input from Reallusion software capabilities. I would have liked to have purchased the product to help me indicate as a snug fit, while showcasing a human model through animations and character created by Reallusion, in goal of, helping grow with website marketing purposes. I wish someone could help me understand more of what the EULA’s contract means in layman’s terms, because the definitions of key terms listed still seem obscure…

Hi…

Sometimes the EULA can appear more restrictive than it actually is.

Which part of the EULA are you unsure about? If you let me know I’ll try to explain it more clearly. Is it just the section on 3D printing or are there other parts that need clarification?

1 Like

I gather that 2D printing is okay for merchandise on hats,shirts, etc., but full fledge 3D printing of just one sided surface derived (modified along the way?) is not legal.

So basically, I’d love to use Reallusion software to show my clients imagery use to determine if they would like to purchase my product morphed and projected as a firm form fit to their 3D scanned topology. Although I’m able to layer in Zbrush themorphed masking animations, perhaps Reallusion software has a caveat into the final steps of rendering animation movie formats to showcase on my website, aside from Adobe and Maxon capabilities. This could require “image” use, as well, being that the product could be an accessory item morphed back and forth between the ZPlug-in.

So basically, I need a piece of jewelery to fit snug along the client’s face that needs to be 3D printed to the topology of client. The jewelery is not shape shifted, projected, or morphed to Reallusion software in all ways, but could be, if I choose to upload my original jewelery content file into Reallusion library.

I guess I’m just paranoid that royalties from any content model library associated with the legalities of Reallusion EULA, because these seem still too strict for direct file manipulation through the Z-plugin, when creating a movie to advertise on website or show the client as a model in a movie render privately or match their physical attributes similarly for 3D.

Maybe I need enterprise license, but right now I’m shying away from a simply standard license, because of fearing the specific restrictions in the EULA for 3D printing.

Your can, of course, print your own 3D models. For example, if you have a 3D scan of your customers and create jewelry for that, that’s your own 3D models.

3D printing of Reallusion’s models that you can buy from the online store isn’t allowed without a special license.

@jesseah

3D printing is fine for personal use or other non-commercial purposes. The restriction applies to the selling or mass production of 3D Printed models that use Reallusion content.