// accessibility
Accessibility Statement.
Effective: 2026-04-24.
Apex Predator is designed to be usable by everyone, including people with disabilities. We aim to conform to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 at Level AA, the international standard adopted under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and similar laws.
Our commitments
- All content is keyboard-navigable. You can use the Service without a pointing device.
- Color is never the sole carrier of information. Meaning is reinforced with text labels.
- Text-background contrast meets WCAG AA ratios (4.5:1 for body, 3:1 for large text).
- Interactive elements have visible focus states.
- Animations and transitions respect
prefers-reduced-motion. If your OS has "reduce motion" enabled, our heartbeat and page transitions are suppressed. - Images have descriptive alt text (decorative elements are marked
aria-hidden). - Headings form a logical outline.
- Form inputs have associated labels.
- We test with automated tools (axe-core, Lighthouse) and manual keyboard testing. We are growing our testing with screen-reader users (NVDA, VoiceOver, JAWS).
Known limitations
We are a small team and actively improving. Known areas under active work:
- The equity-curve chart on /track-record is currently a static image. We are replacing it with an accessible, data-table-backed chart in v1.1.
- Some JetBrains Mono glyphs (used for numbers) may render at slightly lower contrast on certain dark backgrounds. We monitor this.
If you encounter an accessibility barrier — anywhere — please tell us. We take these reports seriously and fix them.
Report an issue
Email accessibility@apexpredator.live with:
- The URL where you encountered the issue;
- A description of the problem;
- The assistive technology you use, if any (e.g., NVDA 2024.x on Windows, VoiceOver on macOS 14).
We commit to a response within 5 business days and to an initial remediation plan within 10 business days for confirmed barriers.
Formal complaints
If you are not satisfied with our response, you may file a complaint with the U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, Disability Rights Section, or your state attorney general's office.