Can you see the Leaping Moon Rabbit? Yes / No / Maybe?
It's a lunar pareidolia.
Various cultures in pre-telescopic times identified several different lunar pareidolia on the near side of the Moon.
The most common were the Man in the Moon (i.e., a man's face in profile) probably mostly in Europe and the Moon Rabbit in parts of Asia. Actually, the Man in the Moon looks to me more like the Wolf in the Moon.
One lunar pareidolia that Wikipedia fails to discuss (see Wikipedia: Lunar pareidolia), but the cutest of all to yours truly is the Leaping Moon Rabbit:
Actually, there are two Moon rabbits: the Leaping Moon Rabbit and just aforementioned just plain Moon Rabbit---I call them Bugs and Peter.
Some cultures see one or other of the Moon rabbits.
Yours truly has noticed that the lunar features are most easily seen by the naked eye when the nearly full moon is up in the daytime. At nighttime, the high contrast between dark night sky and the glaring full moon makes seeing the features difficult. The lower contrast between blue sky and Moon in the daytime makes the lunar features clearer. Yours truly can almost make out the Leaping Moon Rabbit in the daytime. A person with sharper vision might see the Leaping Moon Rabbit quite well.
File: Moon afar file: lunar_pareidolia.html.