Yeah, in delving into the manual, this scanner came out when EEC-IV was the latest thing from FoMoCo... although it does have a raw/simple mode called Basic/Star, which emulates a Ford Star Tester... "recommended only for very experienced Ford Technicians"... lol.
Very interesting. I did a quick bit of research on that and it seems that the Ford "NGS" (New Generation Star) tester has some sophisticated capabilities. So if your scanner emulates that (or something similar) even partially, you probably have a lot more power than I realized! I'd spend some time with that manual and see just what it can do. (If you name your current scanner and I can find an online manual for it, I could take a look and maybe have useful advice.)
For example, I see that the Ford NGS can do graphs. They appear to be low-resolution and probably monochrome, so they would not compare to what you'd see on a device running FORScan, but what you may already have is still quite useful.
... any RECOMMENDATIONS on a FORscan-compatible "dongle" ??
Dirtman's recommendation is good and, IIRC, matches what the FORScan folks recommend.
It also depends a bit on what user-end hardware you have (Windows laptop or Android/iOS smartphone/tablet) to use for running FORScan (or any other software). Lastly, it depends on what vehicles you plan to use it with. For example, if you just use it with a 1999 Ranger, there's no need to get a scantool that supports MS-CAN protocol.
I prefer USB-wired scantools (e.g. OBDLink SX, which I own, or OBDLink EX, which I do not yet own) because they are faster and more reliable and because I typically use a laptop computer when diagnosing. If you go wireless (as is often done by folks with smartphones or tablets), then Bluetooth is strongly recommended over WiFi. The OBDLink MX+ (a Bluetooth device) is a good (but expensive -- currently $100 on Amazon -- ouch!) choice that has support for MS-CAN protocol (and GM's SW-CAN/GMLAN, if that's an advantage for you). I own a 'BAFX Products' Bluetooth scantool ($21 currently at Amazon) and it works quite well but lacks MS-CAN and SW-CAN/GMLAN protocol support. It says "For Android Only" but really means "won't work on iOS". If your Windows laptop has Bluetooth capability, there's no reason the BAFX device shouldn't work. Some food for thought.
If you can tell us which vehicle(s) you plan to be diagnosing and what user-end hardware (laptop, smartphone/tablet) and OS (Windows/Android/iOS) you'd like to use, it would help.
But frankly, as capable as your current hardware seems to be, you might be able to do a lot even without FORScan.