First and foremost did Doug clearly say no feature requests, but meh...
It would be completely irresponsible to include such a limiter. One would only fly with one engine in case of emergency. You as a Pilot should be trained to actualy be able to fly the ship and handle it in an emergency. That means beeing so smart to either bank and sideslip, maybe gimbal the engine and/or throttle down the remaining engine.
Some keen pilots even adjust the throttles and gimbals individualy in order to perform extreme maneuveres. It would be a pitty if that would not be possible any more.
Happy Orbiting
Hey cut it on the rudeness please... :huh:
Smartness has nothing to do with it, neither does training... If that were the case, all these two-engine aircraft outthere with auto-feather, thrust imbalance compensation and auto-yaw wouldn't have these features.
It's a great ship, but it is a flaw in my opinion, just as it is with it's look-alike, the SR-71. Loss of an engine just after roll should not result in immediate loss of control. That being said, it does happen from time to time out there.
The flaw I see in this design is that with full yaw input, and full gimballing, it still results in a loss of control under most circumstances in flight if full thrust is maintained on the remaining engine. Thus, the suggestion, not request that it should have a thrust limiter.
That's not feature request, that's critical input from test flying it a couple of hours.:dry:
Other than that, it's flawless... It's really a wonderful craft to take out in Titan's atmoshere, great handling on glides... Congratulations to the developpment team.

-EDIT-
Actually, to be precise, loss of control occurs with full yaw rudder input and yaw auto gimbal on a single engine at full thrust when the dynamic pressure is less that 8 to 10kPa, right smack in the range of takeoff or slow flight. At the very least, this info should be in the POH...