I am a reseller who purchased Genymotion Desktop Business licenses to sell to customers. How will my customers use the license?

High Confidence (70%)
How customers will use a Genymotion Desktop Business license

1. License activation

  • After purchase, the reseller delivers a license file (or activation key) to the customer.
  • The customer opens Genymotion Desktop, goes to Help → License → Register, and enters the key.
  • The license is bound to the customer’s Genymotion account; it is not transferable.

2. Installation and environment

  • The customer installs Genymotion Desktop on a supported OS (Windows 10/11 ≥ 1809, macOS ≥ 10.15, Linux ≥ Ubuntu 20.04).
  • The desktop client requires a virtual‑box‑compatible hypervisor (VirtualBox or QEMU) that the customer installs separately.

3. Number of virtual devices

  • A Business license allows the customer to run up to the licensed number of virtual devices concurrently (e.g., 3 licenses = up to 3 simultaneous VMs).
  • The customer can create more devices in the UI, but only those within the licensed quota can be active at the same time.

4. Usage context

  • The license is intended for development, testing, and demonstration of Android apps within the customer’s organization.
  • It is not for public distribution or end‑user deployment of the Genymotion client itself.

5. Support and updates

  • The Business plan includes priority support and access to the latest Genymotion releases.
  • Updates are delivered automatically through the Desktop client; the customer must stay connected to the Internet to receive them.

6. Reseller responsibilities

  • Resellers must provide the customer with a valid license key, a copy of the end‑user agreement, and a brief installation guide.
  • The reseller should advise the customer to register on the Genymotion portal to manage the license and receive support.
Bottom line

Customers receive a license key that unlocks the full Genymotion Desktop experience for the licensed number of concurrent virtual Android devices, enabling them to develop, test, and demo apps locally on their own machines.