Fatal problem with MOON, as many other coins, is the too high amount of coins given. Giving too many coins per blocks, don't expect the coin to be worth more than a few Satoshi. Think about it. If it's worth anything more, than everyone would be a millionaire. Why do you think that the more and more the U.S. (or any other country) print bank notes, the less and less the currency is worth? If tomorrow, each and everyone had 1 million $ USD, then 1M$ USD would be worth noting. That's the same with any virtual currencies.
Why do you think MOON stay in the Satoshi, while 42-coin opened trade and is still worth more than 300$...?
I'm not shitting on the coin. And I find it EXTRAORDINARY that it was ever worth more than 2 Satoshi! But one must come to the obvious.
Also, on a more technical side, there's a really major flaw with a coin with such a high number of coins, is that it is bound (be design actually) to overflow and crash. The max number of coins is 384,400,000,000. That is 384,400,000,000 * 100,000,000 Satoshi = 38,440,000,000,000,000,000 Satoshi.
38,440,000,000,000,000,000 is a big number. A really big number. Such a big number in fact that it no longer fit in a 64-bit integer (2^64 = 18,446,744,073,709,551,616), which is what Bitcoin (and other altcoins) code is based upon. So, this coin is be design bound to overflow someday.
So, the slogan is "WE HAVE LIFTOFF"... Let's hope it doesn't end up as the Cluster spacecraft (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluster_%28spacecraft%29), which ironically ended-up crashing 37-second in-flight due to the EXACT same bug... an integer overflow!