It's not something I normally talk about, but I was deeply disabled in my childhood. It was during this time I discovered tabletop gaming as a hobby that I could participate and even thrive doing when most other options were closed to me. Even after being blessed by recovering to lead a normal healthy adult life, tabletop gaming has remained my passion. As the Lead Designer for Roll20 that passion has included expanding our hobby's accessibility to as many people as possible. The obvious ones being isolation and separation but the battle doesn't end there. One of our first hires was a developer who specialized in accessibility. We've started with expanding the platform to every major language. Next comes user interface options to support disabled users, such as ARIA to facilitate screen readers, carefully picking colors to protect our color blind users, and so much more. It's my personal belief that no matter who you are, how your mind or body works, what you believe, or who you love there's a table out there for you and I want Roll20 to be the place you find that table.