Plaintext from the video: Please do not type out your DNIs like this. This kind of censorship is inaccessible to those with screen readers. Thank you.

[Video Description: A recording of text-to-speech software reading text written out with numbers and symbols replacing several of the letters.

The voice says: "Please do en zero tee-tee peh zero zero ut-why er dee en one sil one kay three tee-aitch-ess. Tee-aitch one sk one nd zero eff-see-three enns zero arsh one pee is inauch-syble tee zero say double-you one tee-aitch scar thirty-three en-ar-aders. Tee-aitch four ennek why zero you."

End Video Description.]

And for those curious, since every screen reader reads things a bit differently (and yours might read more of those characters than this text-to-speech program did), the actual text is:

Please do n0t t*pe 0ut y*ur dn1s l1k3 th*s. Th1s k1nd 0f c3ns0rsh1p is inacc*sible t0 th0se w1th scr33n r*aders. Th4nk y0u.

Question, for people with quirks and those with screen readers, would it be a good way to create accessibility by having the normal version first, then having a warning the middle that basically reads "Below this is is my typing quirk of what was said above, please exist this page/navigate to the button directly by this warning to be taken to the next page"? Like making it accessible for both people who feel comfortable typing with quirks and those who use screen readers?

Accessible for those that while it might just be an Internet thing, it still makes them happy and let's them enjoy their own usage without harm, and helps screen readers help make their corners more accessible.