A $L_\infty$-algebra can be defined in many different ways. One common way, that gives the 'right' kind of morphisms, is that a $L_\infty$-algebra is a graded cocommutative and coassociative coalgebra, cofree in the category of locally nilpotent differential graded coalgebras and their morphisms are coalgebra morphisms that commute with the codifferential.
Breaking this compact definition down into something more concrete, the category of $L_\infty$-algebras can equally be defined in the following way:
A $L_\infty$-algebra is a $\mathbb{Z}$-graded vector space $V$, together with a sequence of graded anti-symmetric, $k$-linear maps
$D_k:V \times \cdots \times V \to V$,
homogeneous of degree $-1$,such that the 'weak' Jacobi identity
$ \sum_{p+q=n+1}\sum_{\sigma \in Sh(q,n-q)}\epsilon(\sigma;x_1,\ldots,x_n) D_p(D_q(x_{\sigma(1)},\ldots,x_{\sigma(q)}),x_{\sigma(q+1)},\ldots,x_{\sigma(n)})=0 $
is satisfied, for any $n\in\mathbb{N}$. Where $\epsilon$ is the Koszul sign and $Sh(p,q)$ is the set of suffle permutations.
A morphism of $L_\infty$-algebras $(V,D_{k\in\mathbb{N}})$ and $(W,l_{k\in\mathbb{N}})$ is a sequence $f_{k\in\mathbb{N}}$ of graded-antisymmetric, $k$-linear maps
$ f_k : V\times \cdots \times V \to W $
homogeneous of degree zero, such that the equation
$ \sum_{p+q=n+1}\sum_{\sigma \in Sh(q,n-q)}\epsilon(\sigma;x_1,\ldots,x_n) f_p(D_q(x_{\sigma(1)},\ldots,x_{\sigma(q)}),x_{\sigma(q+1)},\ldots,x_{\sigma(n)})=\\ \sum_{k_1+\cdots+k_j=n}^{k_i\geq 1}\sum_{\sigma \in Sh(k_1,\ldots,k_j)} \epsilon(\sigma;x_1,\ldots,x_n) l_j(f_{k_1}(x_{\sigma(1)},\ldots,x_{\sigma(k_1)}),\ldots, f_{k_j}(x_{\sigma(n-k_j+1)},\ldots,x_{\sigma(n)})) $
is satisfied, for any $n\in\mathbb{N}$.
This defines the category of $L_\infty$-algebras, sometimes called the category of $L_\infty$-algebras with weak morphisms.
Now after that long and tedious definition, the question is:
What is a reasonable definition of a homotopy between two (weak) morphisms $f:V\to W$ and $g:V\to W$ of $L_\infty$-algebras? (And why?)
Edit: A lot of information pointing towards a definition of such a homotopy (or 2-morphism in $(\infty,1)$-categorical language) is spread out in the net. Much on the $n$-category cafe, like in https://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category/2007/02/higher_morphisms_of_lie_nalgeb.html and in the nLab. However it looks like an explicit equation still isn't available.
I would do the tedious calculations myself, since I can get a lot of joy out of such huge and delicate computations, but I'm unable to finde a calculable way to achive that goal. (Such a way should have the potential to apply to the higher homotopies too, hopefully leading towards an explicit description of the hom-space in this category)
P.S.: The tags are not very well suited, feel free to change them