Exodus NDS collects only the information needed to operate the public site, beta testing program, and related security controls.
Public browsing does not require an account. The website may create ordinary server logs through the hosting provider and web server configuration. Those logs can include technical request details such as IP address, browser user agent, requested URL, date, time, and basic error information.
If you apply to beta test, we collect the information you submit on the beta application, including your name, email address, Discord handle if provided, country or time zone if provided, RPG experience, playtest setup, group size, availability, device or platform notes, requested beta products, application status, email validation status, NDA signature details, and beta feedback you submit.
For beta NDA records, we store your typed name, email address, NDA version, signing timestamp, and IP address. Approved beta tester accounts also store login-related account data so you can access authorized downloads and feedback forms.
Server logs are used only for normal site operation, troubleshooting, security, and abuse prevention. Beta tester information is used to review applications, manage tester access, send beta-related email, provide authorized downloads, collect feedback, enforce NDA terms, and maintain a useful playtest record.
We do not sell visitor or beta tester data, build advertising profiles, or use analytics tracking.
The public website does not intentionally set tracking cookies. The framework may set technical cookies for sessions, login, CSRF protection, and normal site operation. These cookies are not used for advertising tracking.
The web dice roller runs in your browser. Rolls are not submitted to us.
Beta application, NDA, authorization, and feedback records may be retained while a beta is active and afterward as needed for release history, access control, dispute handling, and abuse prevention. Retired testers may remain in the admin record so prior beta access and feedback history are not lost.
Discord and other community platforms are separate services with their own privacy practices. Information you post there is handled by those platforms and by the community settings for the relevant server or channel.
For app-specific language, see iOS Privacy.