3.7
55
21005
25
Color Vision Deficiency (CVD) affects people’s ability to distinguish certain colors. Estimates indicate that approximately 200 million people worldwide are affected by some kind of CVD. Individuals of Northern European ancestry, as many as 8 percent of men and 0.5 percent of women experience the common form of red-green color blindness.
This extension helps you to test web pages for people with different types of CVD. It’s particularly useful for websites with data visualisations, because some colors may not be distinguishable from other colors in the charts.
Flash enabled websites are also supported!
I’m a color vision expert and I must say this colorblindness simulator has a lot of shortcomings. It shows protanopia red way too dark, as well as deuteranopia red. It also shows protanomaly and deuteranomaly red hues way too reddish than what they truly perceive them. Their reds are much more closer to yellow hues. Tritanomaly simulation is almost the same as normal vision which is totally wrong. Tritanopia simulation is also wrong since it shows that they practicaly see a whole hue circle with some saturation loss, while in reality they only perceive two hues – our reddish pink and cyanish hue. All in all, if you want to use this extension, use only protanopia and deuteranopia simulations since those are the closest to being correct, but keep in mind that reds are represented darker for both types than what they should be, especially for deutans who see red wavelengths much brighter relative to green wavelengths (they still see both colors as yellowish hues) compared to normal vision. Deuteranopia simulation is actually very close to being correct if it was named protanopia, it just needs a slight double grays (around pink and aqua green) position shift.
I had to restart my computer, but it works. It has a nice range of colour blindness to chose from, and you don’t even have to reload the page as it works instantly! I would recommend this to anyone.
Works well enough, but I have to reset it every time I change the page. I saw that you were going to update it to where it stays, even after a refresh, but until then, I recommend other extensions, such as colorblinding, which can do the same thing, only it does what your app cannot.
Shame it doesn’t work on YouTube videos when you open them in full screen.
But it’s nice that it’s instantaneous and doesn’t need reloading the page! 🙂
Hah! It didn’t work when I’ve added it to my browser.
I restarted the computer and it works now 🙂
Quite helpful! Just wish it worked on local files.
I enjoy the simple, clever technique for applying the filters!
It does the job. One thing I would suggest is to use the common name for the type of color blindness. I wanted to test what it would look like to specifically red-green color blind individuals, so I had to Google red-green color blind to figure our that “Deuteranopia” is what I was looking for. It would ideally be written as “Deuteranopia (red-green)” in the menu.
Fantastic plugin for my UX testing!
This used to work great, but as many others have commented, seems to have stopped working (Version 54.0.2840.99 m)
Great simulation, but lacks options and I’d like to be able to browse my site without having to re-enable it after every single page reload.
Doesn’t work at all for me for some reason
This should only be one of many color accessibility tools that you use. It’s nice to have as a design/development check, but it cannot replace more sophisticated methods.
2 critical issues that need to be fixed:
• Color overlay causes clipping during scrolling on some sites
• Needs an on/off switch as DOM is still affected during “Normal” mode
great idea, but the fact that it doesn’t change background colors/images makes it pretty useless.
Had to disable it because it breaks some sites using javascript.
Simple and does exactly what it says! The checked mark resets every time i pull up the menu.
It’s not working at all and I can’t figure out why
this extension helps me when i want to show my friends what i truly see compared to what they see. It’s extremely efficient!
Works great, BUT, causes conflicts with JIRA (by Atlassian). If this is fixed then it’s a 5-star plugin.
EDIT:
You have to refresh the page.
Previous: 1-star
Does not seem to work. “Options” is greyed out.
How to show people what I see, I love it ^^
I don’t have a way of assessing how accurately it represents the colorblind experience, but it does something and is straightforward in operation.
Caveat: this does not appear to modify all DOM objects. E.g., background images were unmodified, as were some outer DOM containers. So treat it only as a general indicator, don’t try to treat is as a real compliance test.
Excellent simulator
Sounds like a great extension but it doesn’t seem to work for me.
Very usefull, and works great