In one's mind, yes.
I stopped making ASL games when I became familiar with Visual Basic programming. That meant I could create a game in the style of a Quest game, but with my own customisable interface and features.
My offer here is to simply make good use of my very appreciated donation of Quest Pro from Alex, as to not put it to waste.
If I had more time during the week (Unfortunately not due to DJing, Bartending and Doortending), I would learn the basics of ASL once again, and perhaps provide some help with a couple of ASL games, using my upgraded version of Quest/QDK.
As for "Does this mean he could steal our games?", well, truthfully, unless you buy Quest Pro and compile it yourself,
anybody can "steal" and use your ASL code from the moment you release it.
By providing me with your ASL file, I can compile it to .cas so that when you do eventually release it, nobody can "steal" parts (or all) of your hard worked ASL code.
Alex wrote:It's not illegal or against the licence agreement (at the moment anyway).
So get it while it's legal