Hail, traveler! :)

I'm MushroomMerchant. I've decided to take my humble little enterprise global. It's hard to get a good signal out in the wicked woods, but that's nothing a little Mushroom Magic™ (not for sale) can't fix.
I offer hand-made mods and custom content for whatever catches my fancy. It can all be yours for the low price of… well, you're looking a little world-weary there, so why don't you have some on the house!
The catch? Oh, you! HA HA HA! Such a kidder! A fun guy, perhaps? :)
Don't worry about it.
That's right, dear visitor! Thanks to the miracles of technology, this little jar of coins can now be filled from around the globe! Isn't human ingenuity such a wonder? Oh, yes. :)
This one is a fun way to kill time if you've got a couple of mates to barrel through it with. Nice variety of maps to run around with a constant barrage of enemies to stave off, a glut of items with a host of different effects lending the gameplay a bit of novelty, and short but sweet runs that don't outstay their welcome. Very active modding scene, too. A friend of mine got me into this game, so I was playing a lot of it at one point. One thing led to another and next thing I knew, I was trying my hand at modding it.
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There's a really nice mod for this game that lets you play as Sonic the Hedgehog. I had a lot of fun with it, but one peeve of mine is the design of Sonic: how he looks. It's the modern 2010s-2020s design, which I guess I can't fault the mod author for since that's what Sonic looks like now, but my tastes are very particular when it comes to Sonic's appearance.
Risk of Rain 2 lets you unlock skins for each of the playable characters by meeting certain conditions. That means you can also mod the game to add custom skins, even for characters brought in by mods. This struck me as an opportunity to edit the model to more closely resemble his appearance in the GameCube ports of the Sonic Adventure games and introduce that as an option. So here you go for anyone in the same boat as me who prefers Sonic's design from that era.
It's common practice when posting creative work online to place it under some sort of license. Say, Creative Commons if you're familiar with the culture around art/drawing/illustration or other mediums, or the BSD and MIT licenses if you're more of a programming guy. The idea is that -- in some cases -- the author might not want to take on a complete creative monopoly over the work in the form of copyright, and instead might wish to carve out exceptions to the default copyright protection their work is given to allow for reuse, republishing, and reimagining under certain circumstances.
In my case, I don't think it would make sense to publish what I've made under one of these licenses since I'm making pretty liberal use of other IP that I can't really make a claim to, but I don't have a problem with people taking what I've done and doing whatever with it. There might be times I'm building on the work of someone else who expects credit or sets some other stipulation; whenever I am, you'll see a little notice next to the download link to serve as a heads-up. If you refuse to credit that person for some reason or whatever the demand is, then just promise you won't drag me into the slapfight.
TL;DR: whatever you want to do, I don't mind; but others might. I'll let you know on the relevant page.