Most AI writing tools optimize for speed. Very few optimize for outcomes — and almost none are built with accessibility at their core.
LUNAVER is taking a fundamentally different approach: building an AI-powered writing system designed from day one for the blind and visually impaired — and in doing so, creating a better experience for everyone.
We spoke with the team behind LUNAVER to understand how they’re redefining what AI-assisted creativity should look like.
Q&A Section
What core problem are you solving, and why does it matter right now?
Most people have a story worth telling, but lack the time, tools, or technical ability to turn it into a finished book. For over 350 million blind and visually impaired individuals, that barrier is significantly higher — traditional writing tools were never built with them in mind.
LUNAVER removes both constraints simultaneously, making long-form storytelling accessible, structured, and achievable for anyone — regardless of ability.
What sets your product apart in an increasingly crowded AI landscape?
LUNAVER is built accessibility-first — not retrofitted.
The platform runs fully on-device, ensuring complete privacy with zero reliance on cloud infrastructure. At its core is a proprietary Quality Loop, where AI agents iteratively critique and refine each chapter until it reaches a publishable standard.
The output isn’t just generated text — it’s complete, exportable books across formats, including Braille and audiobooks.
What principles guide how you build and evolve your product?
Privacy by design, radical accessibility, and a human-first approach to creativity.
Every feature is tested with real users from the blind community before wider release, ensuring that accessibility is embedded — not layered on.
What kind of real-world impact have you seen from users so far?
In beta, 117 authors have produced 181 books and over 325 chapters.
More importantly, these are individuals who previously had no viable path to authorship — now holding complete manuscripts for the first time.
What are most companies still getting wrong when adopting AI today?
They treat AI as a replacement for human creativity rather than a collaborator.
The real value comes from using AI to handle structure, iteration, and refinement — while the human retains authorship and control.
Accessibility is also widely overlooked, still treated as optional instead of foundational.
Where do you see your category heading over the next 1–2 years?
AI creative tools will shift toward on-device, privacy-first systems.
The next evolution isn’t about generating fragments of content — it’s about producing complete, publication-ready work across formats, accessible to everyone.
Closing Section
LUNAVER’s approach highlights a broader shift happening in AI: the move from generation to completion, from novelty to utility, and from accessibility as an afterthought to accessibility as the foundation.
