Kenichi Nishi, producer of the critically-acclaimed PlayStation Japanese role-playing game
Moon: Remix RPG Adventure has called on users of social media site Twitter to help secure a publisher for a potential sequel.
The 43-year-old designer, who is credited on titles such as
Chrono Trigger,
Incredible Crisis and
Chibi Robo, posted a tweet asking fans to voice support for a sequel by using the hashtag '#Moon2' in their tweets.
Nishi wrote on Twitter (translated
by Eurogamer): "If you'd like a sequel to Moon, please use the hashtag '#Moon2' so that I can tell a sponsor 'we have around this many fans'."
"Feel free to say what kind of features and what difficulty you'd like," he continued. "Personally I think online would be good."
According to translation by fans on forum NeoGAF, Nishi said Moon 2 is "not a sure thing" and "needs money for development costs".
Despite relatively meager sales
Moon remains one of Japan's most critically-acclaimed JRPGs, praised for the way in which it plays with genre conventions and for its open-ended, non-linear play arc.
The game was created by Nishi's now defunct studio Love-de-Lic, Inc and published by ASCII Corporation. While ASCII showed the game at E3 in 1997 revealing plans to release the following year, the publisher eventually decided not to release
Moon outside Japan. A fan project to translate the game into English stalled.