RemyTalk exists for kids whose voices have been overlooked. Accessibility is not a feature here. It is the whole point. We target WCAG 2.1 AA as a baseline and go beyond it wherever it matters for AAC users.
Motor accessibility
- Large Button mode for kids with limited fine motor control.
- Dwell selection for eye-gaze and head-tracking users.
- Scanning mode with adjustable speed for switch users.
- Two-switch and single-switch compatibility through keyboard input.
- Generous tap targets (minimum 44 by 44 CSS pixels, larger in Large Button mode).
Visual accessibility
- High-contrast color tokens that meet AA contrast ratios at every size.
- Readable typography with a friendly, dyslexia-aware default font.
- Scalable text and respects system text-size settings.
- Picture symbols alongside words on every learning surface.
Cognitive and language accessibility
- Plain-language labels everywhere. No jargon.
- First / Then, Choice Board, and Modeling Mode for guided learning.
- Symbol-to-text bridge to grow with the learner.
- Emotion check-in for kids who can't yet name their feelings out loud.
Hearing and speech
- Adjustable speech rate and volume.
- Choice of natural human-sounding AI voices and on-device voices.
- Parent and caregiver recordings so children can hear a familiar voice speaking for them.
Screen reader and keyboard support
Every interactive element has a clear label. Focus states are visible and persistent. The whole app can be operated with a keyboard. We test with VoiceOver, TalkBack, and NVDA.
Offline first
A child should never lose their voice because of a dropped WiFi signal. RemyTalk works fully offline for everyday communication. Sync happens when you reconnect.
Tell us what we missed
If something here doesn't work for you or your child, we want to know. Email Damien@ClearSkaiTechnologies.com and we'll prioritize fixing it.