Mark Emmert said it’s the No. 1 question he gets asked, but that doesn’t mean anything will change with respect to the popular NCAA video game. There are plenty of legal disputes to be resolved.

The game has been shelved since 2014 when the NCAA said it would not renew its licensing contract with Electronic Arts because of an ongoing legal dispute about the use of player likenesses in the games.

Jane McManus of the New York Daily News reported: “NCAA president Mark Emmert said he is open to bringing it back, but would need 1. assurances that no more lawsuits would be filed, 2. a group license deal that gives students a voice 3. without giving them a union and making them employees.”

Speaking at The Aspen Institute, Emmert added, “I think that would be way cool if I was an athlete at that level,” Ross Dellenger of Sports Illustrated reported.

Last month, the Greenville News quoted EA Sports CEO Andrew Wilson about the possibility of bringing back the game.

“We would love to build a game,” EA Sports CEO Andrew Wilson said during the Wall Street Journal Tech Live convention. “If there’s a world where the folks who govern these things are able to solve for how to pay players for the use of their name and likeness and stats and data, we would jump at the opportunity to build a game in a heartbeat.”

USA Today Sports’ Steve Berkowitz reported that during the O’Bannon case in 2014, EA Sports executive Joel Linzner testified that the NCAA football game generated approximately $80 million per year in revenue on the sale of approximately 2 million units.

Here’s a full answer from Emmert: