Accessibility Statement

Last updated: May 11, 2026

One Minute Web is built to be fast, readable, and usable by as many people as possible. Accessibility is an ongoing practice, especially because the site includes interactive games with timing, color, memory, keyboard, pointer, and visual scanning demands.

Our practical target

We use the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.2 as a reference and aim for WCAG 2.2 AA where practical for this type of browser-based tool site. This statement is not a legal certification, but it is the standard we use to guide improvements.

What we work on

  • Semantic page structure with clear page titles and headings
  • Readable color contrast on the dark interface
  • Responsive layouts that support browser zoom and smaller screens
  • Keyboard-friendly navigation and visible focus states where controls support it
  • Accessible labels for buttons, links, forms, and interactive controls where practical
  • Reduced-motion support for users who prefer less animation

Known limitations

Some games are inherently visual, timed, or pointer-heavy. A color-matching game, reaction test, maze, or divided-attention game may not work equally well with every assistive technology or input method. We are working to make instructions, labels, controls, and alternatives better over time.

Feedback and help

If something blocks you from using One Minute Web, email [email protected]. Please include the page URL, your device, browser, assistive technology if relevant, and what happened. We will review the issue and look for a practical fix.

Helpful reference

The U.S. Department of Justice provides public guidance on web accessibility and the ADA. We use that kind of public guidance, along with WCAG, to keep improving the site.