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Report generated on April 13, 2026

1877cprj.com
Screenshot of 1877cprj.com

A note on how to read this

This report is ProdPoke's take on your site — think of it as a first impression from a very opinionated robot. We check real things (load times, broken links, accessibility patterns), but we also try to understand what your site is trying to do and whether the technical details support that goal. Some of our observations might not apply to your specific situation, and that's okay. We're getting sharper with every scan. If something feels off, tell us — it makes us better.

Key Insights for 1877彩票软件_1877彩票娱乐平台_官方注册通道

Keyboard trap on iframe blocks all keyboard navigation—complete blocker.

This violates WCAG 2.1 Level A and prevents keyboard users from using the site at all. For a gambling platform collecting payment data, this is a liability.

No privacy policy present—legal requirement + trust killer for data collection.

Gambling sites handling deposits must explain data handling. Missing privacy policy signals inexperience or indifference, directly suppressing conversion from risk-averse users.

Pixelated jackpot banner and dominant slot machine imagery damage legitimacy.

Low-quality graphics on premium elements reinforce 'sketchy offshore casino' perception. Button hierarchy is broken with four similar CTAs and no descriptive labels.

Zero visible licensing, regulatory badges, or security certifications anywhere.

Even offshore gambling platforms display gaming licenses or security seals to reduce deposit hesitation. Complete absence here is a red flag for first-time visitors considering real money.

Four action buttons create decision paralysis with unclear hierarchy and placeholder text.

Visitors don't know which button to click first. Weak CTA design directly reduces sign-up conversion and creates friction at the highest-intent moment.

What ProdPoke understands about 1877彩票软件_1877彩票娱乐平台_官方注册通道

The site structure communicates its purpose quickly, but the experience deteriorates once visitors interact with it. A keyboard trap on the embedded iframe completely blocks keyboard navigation—a critical blocker for accessibility compliance and a sign that QA testing was minimal. Four action buttons with unclear hierarchy force visitors to guess which call-to-action to choose. Most damaging: the site collects emails and personal data without a privacy policy, a legal violation that signals either negligence or disregard for user rights. Combined, these issues create friction exactly where trust matters most.

Based on exploring 0 pages across the site

First Impression — How clear is your site?

72
Mostly clear

1877cprj.com is a Chinese-language online gambling and lottery platform offering sports betting, casino games, and deposit bonuses. While the core value proposition is immediately clear, the site reads as a risky offshore betting platform to Western eyes—heavy promotional messaging, pixelated graphics, and a complete absence of regulatory or trust signals make visitors hesitant to provide payment information.

This score measures how quickly a first-time visitor understands what your site does — based on visible headings, navigation, and visual hierarchy alone.

55/ 100

Overall Score

Good start — room to grow.

60

Site Clarity

decent

Within seconds, it's clear this is a Chinese online gambling/lottery platform offering sports betting and casino games with deposit bonuses and daily rewards.. The value proposition is solid — "锁定赛事,解锁精彩,你的主场永不落幕!🎉". First-time visitor concern: Legitimate regulatory status and safety of depositing money on this platform — no visible licensing information, regulatory body mentions, or trust signals are present on the page.

-Value Proposition

Clear headline communicates the offering above the fold.

-Search & Sharing Preview

Title, description, and social sharing tags are all present and well-sized.

-Call to Action

CTA present above the fold.

-Target Audience

Site clearly targets its audience and backs it up with social proof.

-Navigation

Well-structured navigation with clear links to key pages.

-Credibility Signals

Multiple trust signals present: custom domain, testimonials.

-Content Depth

Sufficient content to understand the offering, with supporting sections that address visitor questions.

50

Visual Impression

acceptable

This looks like a typical offshore gambling site with aggressive marketing tactics—not inherently scammy, but the heavy use of Chinese characters, bold bonus promises, and lack of regulatory transparency would make most Western users hesitant to deposit real money.

Desktop

Clean centered layout with good contrast and readable typography, but the design feels dated (Bootstrap basics) and relies heavily on promotional banners rather than building trust through design polish.

Mobile

The mobile version adapts the layout well vertically and buttons are appropriately sized, though the jackpot hero image is lower resolution and the overall experience feels like a squeezed desktop rather than a mobile-first design.

Strongest element: The K8 branding logo at bottom is clean and memorable in gold/serif treatment—it's the only element that feels intentionally designed rather than templated.

Issues

Jackpot banner at top uses low-quality/pixelated graphics for a premium visual element—hurts perceived legitimacy

Four action buttons (two sign-up variants, two numbered buttons) create decision paralysis and unclear hierarchy; buttons lack descriptive text beyond placeholder characters

Promotional banner with slot machine imagery dominates space and reads as 'sketchy online casino' to risk-averse users

No visible security badges, regulatory info, or trust signals anywhere on the page—red flag for gambling site credibility

77

Trust & Security

moderate

Your site would give most visitors pause before entering their email address, because you're collecting personal data without explaining how you'll use or protect it. The missing privacy policy is a legal requirement that signals either inexperience or indifference to visitor rights—either way, it erodes trust immediately. You're also tracking visitors silently through analytics, which many people find intrusive when they haven't consented. On the positive side, your landing page appears straightforward and focused. The quickest way to rebuild confidence is to add a clear privacy policy linked from your forms and display a simple cookie consent notice that lets visitors opt in or out—these aren't just legal boxes to check, they're signals that you respect people's data.

medium sensitivity

Data collection tier

8

Security Headers checked

0

Mixed Content

Issues (2)

Collects personal data without a privacy policy

high

This site has forms collecting personal data but no visible link to a privacy policy. This is a legal requirement in the EU (GDPR), California (CCPA), and many other jurisdictions. Beyond legality, it signals to visitors that their data handling hasn't been thought through.

Expected: Visible privacy policy link, typically in footer
Found: No privacy policy link found despite data collection forms

Tracking visitors without asking consent

medium

This site sets tracking cookies and/or loads analytics (clarity) without displaying a cookie consent banner. Under GDPR and ePrivacy regulations, explicit consent is required before setting non-essential cookies. Many privacy-conscious visitors will notice.

Expected: Cookie consent banner before setting tracking cookies
Found: Analytics loaded: clarity -- no consent mechanism found
32

Accessibility

poor

Multiple critical accessibility barriers prevent keyboard and screen reader users from accessing core functionality, including a keyboard trap and 20 unlabeled interactive elements.

3

Tab Stops

3

Invisible Focus

1

Focus Traps

No

Skip Link

What's done well

  • + Language attribute is correctly set to zh-CN, supporting screen readers for Chinese content
  • + Viewport allows zoom and is user-scalable, supporting low-vision users
  • + Focus-visible CSS is detected, suggesting some focus styling is in place

Top Priority Fix

Remove the keyboard trap on the iframe by adding a title attribute and ensuring focus can escape via Escape key or tab navigation. This is a complete blocker for keyboard users and must be fixed before any other issue.

Keyboard Trap Blocks Navigation

20 Interactive Elements Missing Accessible Names

Form Inputs Lack Labels and Autocomplete

Color Contrast Failures in Critical Content

Heading Structure and Page Landmarks Broken

Missing Alt Text on 15 Images and No Skip-to-Content Link

Missing Iframe Title and Focusable Elements in Hidden Content

Issues (7)

Keyboard Trap Blocks Navigation

critical

Your site contains a keyboard trap on an iframe that prevents users from tabbing past it. During manual testing, focus became stuck at tab position #3 on an iframe element with no title attribute. Keyboard-only users (including those with motor disabilities who cannot use a mouse) will be unable to access any content after this iframe and may believe the page is broken. This is a WCAG Level A violation that completely blocks keyboard navigation.

Expected: Accessible to all users per WCAG 2.1 AA
Found: The site contains a keyboard trap on an iframe that prevents users from tabbing past it. During manual testing, focus became stuck at tab position #3 on an iframe element with no title attribute. Keyboard-only users (including those with motor disabilities who cannot use a mouse) will be unable to access any content after this iframe and may believe the page is broken. This is a WCAG Level A violation that completely blocks keyboard navigation.

20 Interactive Elements Missing Accessible Names

critical

20 of 74 interactive elements lack accessible names, including 4 social media icon links (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest) and at least 1 text input. Screen reader users will encounter elements with no announced purpose. For example, the Facebook link reads as just 'link' with no indication it goes to Facebook. The text input with placeholder '姓名' (name) has no associated label element, making it unclear what data should be entered.

Expected: Accessible to all users per WCAG 2.1 AA
Found: 20 of 74 interactive elements lack accessible names, including 4 social media icon links (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest) and at least 1 text input. Screen reader users will encounter elements with no announced purpose. For example, the Facebook link reads as just 'link' with no indication it goes to Facebook. The text input with placeholder '姓名' (name) has no associated label element, making it unclear what data should be entered.

Form Inputs Lack Labels and Autocomplete

high

All 3 form inputs (0% properly labeled) are missing <label> elements and autocomplete attributes. The name input uses only a placeholder attribute (姓名), which disappears when focused and provides no persistent label. This creates confusion for all users, especially those using screen readers or with cognitive disabilities. Missing autocomplete attributes prevent password managers and browsers from auto-filling fields, reducing usability.

Expected: Accessible to all users per WCAG 2.1 AA
Found: All 3 form inputs (0% properly labeled) are missing <label> elements and autocomplete attributes. The name input uses only a placeholder attribute (姓名), which disappears when focused and provides no persistent label. This creates confusion for all users, especially those using screen readers or with cognitive disabilities. Missing autocomplete attributes prevent password managers and browsers from auto-filling fields, reducing usability.

Color Contrast Failures in Critical Content

high

5 text/background combinations fail WCAG contrast requirements. Most critically, white text on the pink/red background (rgb(225, 36, 84)) has a ratio of 4.58:1, which passes AA but fails AAA and is borderline for AA. More severe: dark text (rgb(51, 51, 51)) on the same pink background has a ratio of 2.76:1, failing even AA (requires 4.5:1). A soccer-related text element has 1:1 contrast (white on white), making it completely invisible. Users with low vision or color blindness cannot read this content.

Expected: Accessible to all users per WCAG 2.1 AA
Found: 5 text/background combinations fail WCAG contrast requirements. Most critically, white text on the pink/red background (rgb(225, 36, 84)) has a ratio of 4.58:1, which passes AA but fails AAA and is borderline for AA. More severe: dark text (rgb(51, 51, 51)) on the same pink background has a ratio of 2.76:1, failing even AA (requires 4.5:1). A soccer-related text element has 1:1 contrast (white on white), making it completely invisible. Users with low vision or color blindness cannot read this content.

Heading Structure and Page Landmarks Broken

high

Your page has 2 H1 headings (should be 1 per page), multiple heading level jumps (H1→H3, H3→H5), and no <main>, <header>, <footer>, or <search> landmarks. Additionally, 2 <nav> elements exist but lack aria-label attributes to distinguish them. Screen reader users cannot easily navigate the page structure or understand the information hierarchy. The absence of a <main> landmark violates WCAG Level A requirements.

Expected: Accessible to all users per WCAG 2.1 AA
Found: The page has 2 H1 headings (should be 1 per page), multiple heading level jumps (H1→H3, H3→H5), and no <main>, <header>, <footer>, or <search> landmarks. Additionally, 2 <nav> elements exist but lack aria-label attributes to distinguish them. Screen reader users cannot easily navigate the page structure or understand the information hierarchy. The absence of a <main> landmark violates WCAG Level A requirements.

Improvement Plan

This site has a clear product offering but critical execution gaps that erode visitor confidence precisely when you need it most—at sign-up and deposit. Start immediately with the accessibility keyboard trap on the iframe; this is a complete blocker that makes the site unusable for keyboard-only users and exposes you to WCAG compliance claims. Next, publish a privacy policy and link it from the footer and sign-up flow. A gambling platform that doesn't explain data handling is implicitly asking visitors to trust you blind—most won't. Third, audit your button hierarchy. Four similar action buttons with placeholder labels force visitors to guess your intent. Consolidate to one primary CTA (e.g., 'Register Now') and clarify secondary actions. Fourth, invest in replacing the pixelated jackpot banner with a clean, high-resolution graphic and consider removing or de-emphasizing the slot machine imagery that reads as 'offshore casino' to risk-averse users. Finally, add visible trust signals: gaming license information (if applicable), SSL/security badges, and responsible gambling notices. Even offshore platforms display these to reduce deposit friction. These fixes address the gap between clarity (you communicate your purpose well) and credibility (visitors don't believe it's safe to deposit).

Suggested priority order:

  1. Fix keyboard trap on iframe—blocker for accessibility
  2. Publish privacy policy and link from sign-up flow—legal requirement
  3. Consolidate CTAs and clarify button hierarchy—reduces friction
  4. Replace low-quality graphics with professional designs—improves legitimacy
  5. Add visible gaming license and security badges—reduces deposit hesitation

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Automated analysis generated on April 13, 2026. Not professional advice. Contact us to modify or remove this report.