Q: When a disabled person wants to write a report at work, do most of them use an "accessibility-focused app" or do they use Microsoft Word with its accessibility features and tools?
A: They use (...or ... or ...)
Q: When a disabled person wants to use reddit, do most of them use an "accessibility-focused app" or do they use a mainstream third-party reddit app with their accessibility features and tools?
A: According to the community at , the vast majority of blind and visually impaired users use Apollo, RIF, Boost, Sync, BaconReader, etc. to access reddit. Because their devs wrote fantastic apps that, unlike Reddit, actually took the time to comply with accessibility standards.
I mean it's obvious if you think for five seconds that disabled users use mature, well-written, normal apps that have accessibility features, right?
So when Reddit says it's okay to kill third party apps because they're approving "accessibility focused apps", they're either colossally ignorant, or they're lying.
Either one is plausible.