Spine looks and feels really great and I'm quite tempted to back it/purchase it.
Personally I'm a bit sad, that you sell it for $ 55 (which makes effectively ~45% off on the Kickstarter and not 50%), but maybe I'm just too spoiled by free software...
What I really dislike is, that you don't give a correct definition of a license. The only text one gets to see before getting redirected to PayPal is:
Purchase Spine now to enable exporting animations for use in your games! Export as individual or sequences of images, AVI or QuickTime video, or as binary or JSON for use with a game toolkit runtime.
Which doesn't say anything about what the buyer is entitled to do with the software. I'm not a lawyer or anything, but I don't think that you'd win any trial, if big companies would buy one license and use it on every PC and do whatever they want, because the only "agreement" they got, was that the license will allow them to export stuff.
Such vague descriptions are 'okay' for open source and free products, but as soon as it comes to dealing with money, you'll have to get more technical and get more into legal stuff, for your own and your customers protection.
Looking around the forum I found some more information on what the license stands for, but do you seriously expect from people to search the forum to find more information about what they're actually buying?
If you purchase Spine now, you will get all future updates for free. You will also get access to all the runtimes when they are released.
...
One license equates one person or as some people call it "one seat". You won't find any problems switching PC's with it.
I'm sorry if I came a bit rouge across, but I feel like those are important factors that are missing at the moment and felt like pointing them out, as well as giving any other reader the opportunity to see what they actually might buy or back. I didn't want to offend you, your product or your company in anyway.
But I'm still not sure if I will back it...
PS: Again I'm not a lawyer, but in most countries you're forced to provide an imprint, meaning name + address, at least for commercial websites.