2 tricks I recently discovered will make your web browsing 1 trillion times better, faster, and ironically, more accessible in some cases.
Disable CSS. I’m not joking. This one has accessibility benefits that I did not know exist until I browsed the web with CSS disabled. When you disable CSS, it makes browsing flyout menus 1 trillion times easier. It also makes browsing website navigation a lot easier as well for menus that don’t work on mobile and otherwise. It’s easier to tell what’s hidden and what’s not, like banners and stuff. I’ve actually been browsing the web with CSS disabled for a while now and I don’t regret it. If you do rely on contrast controls though, I don’t recommend you do this because if you disable CSS, things will become very high contrast which could make it very bad for people with a stigmatism.
Disable Javascript. This one is a little more common. There have been articles about what it was like browsing the web without JavaScript for like a week. This will break 80% of things on the web, but in my opinion, if your website doesn’t work without JavaScript, your website is Broken. It’s not an issue with my configurations. Disabling JavaScript will just make your entire web browsing a lot better. Very few pop-ups if even at all, you get rid of most pay walls, you don’t have any distractions, pages load lightning fast, you don’t have any annoying junk slowing down the page after it loads, you stop pages from changing after the page loads, and, the best part, you get rid of every accessibility overlay ever.
I recommend that you make a second profile in your browser with those two things disabled, so that way, you can switch between profiles when you want to interact with the web again.