Accessibility
We aim for WCAG 2.1 AA: keyboard navigation, focus visibility, color contrast, and readable typography. If you encounter a barrier, email us with the page URL and we’ll address it.
Statement of commitment
We aim to make this site usable for the widest range of people and devices. Our goal is alignment with WCAG 2.1 AA where feasible.
What we do
- Structure: semantic HTML with headings, lists, and landmarks.
- Keyboard support: navigable controls and visible focus states.
- Labels & ARIA: descriptive labels on form controls; ARIA where appropriate.
- Contrast & color: color palettes selected for contrast; content not conveyed by color alone.
- Responsive: layouts adapt to narrow screens; text reflows without loss of content.
Supported environments
We test recent versions of major browsers (Chrome, Edge, Safari, Firefox) on desktop and mobile. If you experience an issue, let us know your device and browser version.
Limitations & known issues
- Some third‑party embeds may not fully meet our accessibility targets.
- Visualizations and icons include text alternatives, but may still need refinement.
Requesting assistance
Encounter an accessibility barrier? Email everydayroyalties@gmail.com with the page URL, description, and your assistive technology (if any). We prioritize these requests.
How you can help us improve accessibility
If you rely on assistive technology and find parts of the quiz or articles difficult to use, we would appreciate specific feedback. Screenshots, a short description of your setup, or examples of where navigation breaks are especially helpful. As we iterate on the design, we aim to prioritize changes that remove barriers for as many users as possible.
How to report an accessibility barrier
If you encounter a barrier—such as poor keyboard focus order, confusing labels, or content that does not work with your assistive technology—please share the page URL, your device and browser, and a short description of what went wrong.
We use those reports to prioritize fixes. When we update a page, we test with keyboard‑only navigation and screen readers where possible so that the same issue is less likely to appear again.
Accessibility as an ongoing practice
We treat accessibility as an ongoing responsibility rather than a one-time checklist. As new devices, browsers, and assistive technologies emerge, we revisit layouts, color choices, and interaction patterns to see where small changes could make the experience smoother for more people.
Why headings and structure matter
Clear heading levels, descriptive link text, and consistent layout patterns are small details that make a big difference for many readers. We review pages with this in mind so that people using screen readers, keyboard navigation, or small screens can scan and understand content without extra friction.
Learning from real accessibility testing
Automated checks can catch some issues, but they do not replace feedback from real people with disabilities. As we continue to improve the site, we aim to incorporate insights from users who rely on assistive technology every day.
