Our Commitment

Given our audience, accessibility isn't an afterthought—it's fundamental. We're building tools for autistic people, many of whom experience sensory sensitivities, visual processing differences, and other accessibility needs.

We aim to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA standards and exceed them where possible, particularly for features that matter most to our community.

Customization Options

Use the accessibility panel (gear icon in the navigation) to customize your experience:

Theme Options

  • Light mode — Warm cream background
  • Dark mode — Reduced brightness for low-light
  • High contrast — Maximum contrast for visibility

Motion Control

  • Reduced motion option disables animations
  • Respects your system preferences automatically
  • No auto-playing videos or carousels

Typography

  • Font sizes — 100%, 125%, or 150%
  • Dyslexia-friendly font — OpenDyslexic option
  • Atkinson Hyperlegible — Default body font designed for low vision

Your Preferences

  • Settings are saved in your browser
  • Persist across visits
  • No account required

Technical Accessibility

  • Semantic HTML — Proper heading hierarchy, landmarks, and structure
  • Keyboard navigation — All interactive elements accessible via keyboard
  • Focus indicators — Visible focus outlines on all interactive elements
  • Skip links — Jump directly to main content
  • Screen reader support — ARIA labels and roles where needed
  • Color contrast — Meets WCAG AA standards (4.5:1 for text)
  • Touch targets — Minimum 44x44px for interactive elements
  • Responsive design — Works on all screen sizes

Sensory Considerations

As autistic people ourselves, we understand sensory sensitivities:

  • No flashing or strobing content
  • No auto-playing audio or video
  • Calm, consistent color palette
  • Clean layouts without visual clutter
  • No pop-ups or intrusive overlays
  • No time-limited interactions

Known Limitations

We're continuously improving, but currently:

  • Some third-party fonts (Google Fonts) may have loading delays
  • OpenDyslexic font files need to be hosted locally (coming soon)
  • Complex tool interfaces may need further screen reader optimization

Feedback

Found an accessibility barrier? We want to know. As autistic people, we know firsthand how frustrating inaccessible design can be.

Please reach out and we'll work to fix any issues as quickly as possible.

Standards We Follow

  • Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA
  • WAI-ARIA Authoring Practices
  • Semantic HTML5 standards

Last updated: January 2026