• Zarobi@aussie.zone
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    11 hours ago

    Yeah at first it looks hideous, but also every letter is extremely distinct from each other, so reading actually becomes easy for me. Of all things, comic sans is also a very good font for dyslexics. I’d rather have something ugly that is legible.

    • hikaru755@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      So I’ve been wondering about this, does this kind of font make reading easier immediately for you, or does it take a bit until you’ve gotten used to and, idk, learned the shapes of the individual letters, after which it’s then faster?

      • Zarobi@aussie.zone
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        2 hours ago

        It was pretty immediate. I was like man this is ugly, but when I actually tried it, straight away I noticed it was extremely easier and faster to read and I made much less mistakes. Like normally I misread words and letters and numbers a lot and reread the same line over and over and words just look like identical blocky shapes. A lot of the time I actually just guess what word something is based on length and context, which kind of works but not really. But with that font I can read normally.

        I only even realised I might have it and got it investigated when I accidentally changed the font to OpenDyslexic in Kindle because it was just there, and then I’m like, ok wow I didn’t even notice how hard it was before 😂

    • burt@programming.dev
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      11 hours ago

      of my collection of neurodivergencies, dyslexia is not one of them, but I will use opendyslexic when reading ebooks.