120 Interest Score
12 Discussions
0.10 Engagement
May 2025 Launched

WCAG in Plain English is a super clear, plain-language version of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines. You can filter by role, disability, or type of content, whatever helps you learn and explore the success criteria faster.

What the Community Said

Massive kudos to the team for making something as complex as WCAG truly accessible. Turning dense compliance guidelines into actionable, plain-language tips with examples is exactly what the dev and design community needed. This will definitely live in my bookmarks. Thanks for bridging the gap between technical documentation and real-world usability!

— [REDACTED]

Absolutely love this! Accessibility can feel overwhelming sometimes, and breaking down WCAG in plain English is such a helpful move for designers and devs. Great job team!

— [REDACTED]

Hey y'all! I’m part of the team behind AAArdvark, and we’re super excited to launch WCAG in Plain English. We built this because we kept hearing the same thing: “I know accessibility matters, but I have no idea what these guidelines actually mean.” So we took each WCAG success criterion and rewrote it in simple, approachable language. Complete with examples and tips for fixing issues on sites. This project has been years in the making, and we hope it helps developers, designers, content creators

— [REDACTED]

voted! finally a clear take on accessibility rules

— [REDACTED]

Well done, this kind of functions like a nice WCAG checklist too 😅

— [REDACTED]

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Frequently Asked Questions

A measure of community engagement at launch. Higher means more people noticed and interacted with the product. It's a traction signal, not a quality rating.

Discussion threads divided by interest score. Above 0.30 is strong. Below 0.15 suggests the product got clicks but not conversation.

Categories come from the product's launch tags. Most products appear in 2-3 categories. The primary category is listed first.

The scores reflect launch-period engagement. Historical data is preserved and doesn't change retroactively. The build date at the bottom shows when the index was last refreshed.

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