Dragon's Dogma is an action-RPG developed by Capcom and released in 2012, set in the fictional land of Gransys, the player character known as Arisen is forced to leave his hometown on a quest to slay a Dragon that not only destroyed his village, but stole his heart and is feared to raze the entire nation.

Ever since the succesful release, fans all over the globe have been asking for a sequel, including a few failed change.org petitions, e-mails, fan letters and more. Considering that Hideaki Itsuno, game director of the game and first concept creator of this IP had been working on a secret project and how Capcom released a MMO videogame set in the same universe, many of us thought he was working on a sequel already and the MMO was the way the company was trying to raise funds for it, now that it is confirmed Itsuno was actually developing Devil May Cry 5 instead, many fans have asked about the sequel and Itsuno himself has said that it all depends on Capcom's response, and that their response depends on us, as fans. So I've made this petition.

The arguments:

Why do we want a Dragon's Dogma sequel?

Dragon's Dogma is special to many of us because it has many traits that in their simplicity, make it special. You are given some starting gear, they tell you to slay a dragon and you set out on a quest to do it, having to face goblins, bandits and all kinds of classical monsters in order to progress, each and every one of them with their own weaknesses, considering how well Monster Hunter World has been able to make monster behaviour, I'm sure the new monsters of a possible Dragon's Dogma sequel would have very interesting interactions with not only us, but the world. Not to mention, the pawn system, unique in it's entirety I can't wait to see how it would expand itself on a sequel.

TL;DR

All in all, I consider Dragon's Dogma one of my favorite games ever made, a game with a soul of it's own thanks to the kind love the developers put in it, a sequel could only make things better for the videogame community and Capcom. So if there's aught to be done to get things in motion, tis' the moment to act.