Clear to perceive
Important content should be presented in ways that are easier to see, read, hear, or understand.
Accessibility at ShowRave
ShowRave is committed to improving accessibility across our event discovery, ticketing, organizer, partner, and account experiences.
Our commitment
People interact with events in different ways, using different devices, abilities, settings, and assistive technologies. We aim to make ShowRave easier to navigate, understand, and use for as many people as possible.
Accessibility standard
Our accessibility efforts are guided by practical web accessibility principles, including clear structure, keyboard access, readable content, sufficient contrast, and support for assistive technologies where possible.
Design principles
Accessibility is not only about compliance. It is about making everyday tasks easier, clearer, and more reliable for people with different needs.
Important content should be presented in ways that are easier to see, read, hear, or understand.
Navigation, forms, buttons, and core actions should be usable without unnecessary complexity.
We aim to use clear labels, helpful page structure, and content that supports confident decision-making.
Accessibility needs evolve as the product grows, so we review, learn, and improve over time.
Accessibility features
These are some of the areas we consider when building and improving the ShowRave experience.
We aim to make key pages, links, buttons, and form controls reachable and usable through keyboard interaction.
We use semantic structure and accessible labels where possible to support screen readers and other assistive tools.
We work to maintain visual contrast that helps text, controls, and important interface elements remain readable.
We aim to support readable layouts that remain usable when users adjust zoom, text size, or device settings.
We encourage meaningful alternative text and descriptive content where images communicate important information.
ShowRave includes dark mode support to help users choose a viewing experience that is more comfortable for them.
Different user needs
Accessible design can support people using assistive technology, mobile devices, low-light settings, slow connections, temporary injuries, or different browsing preferences.
Interfaces should remain usable on smaller screens, with actions that are clear and easy to select.
Users should be able to move through important workflows with predictable controls and visible interaction states.
Page structure, labels, and meaningful content order help assistive technologies communicate the experience more clearly.
Ongoing improvement
As ShowRave grows, we continue reviewing pages, improving components, and learning from user feedback. Some areas may still need refinement, but our goal is steady, practical progress.
We review core flows such as event discovery, registration, ticketing, account access, and organizer tools.
We improve buttons, forms, headings, navigation, messages, and reusable interface patterns as issues are found.
We consider different screen sizes, browsers, input methods, and display preferences when reviewing the product.
Reports from users help us understand real barriers and decide what to improve next.
Known limitations
We are actively improving ShowRave, and some older pages, third-party content, embedded tools, or user-generated content may not yet meet the level of accessibility we want. We welcome reports that help us identify and prioritise these issues.
Accessibility feedback
If you experience an accessibility barrier on ShowRave, please tell us what happened and where you encountered the issue. Clear details help us investigate and improve faster.
Contact us
Contact us if you need help using ShowRave, want to report an accessibility issue, or have suggestions for improving the experience.
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