Treat your animated effects as “set dressing” only, and do your part to ensure all end users be able to operate your app fully. Turn on Narrator (or the screen reader native to your mobile device) and then use your app without looking at it. Try using your app without using a mouse or touchscreen. W3C has a good introductory overview and many more resources available. If you are not someone with low vision yourself, I invite you to educate yourself on basic web accessibility topics as you continue on your Power Apps journey. If your animated effect is required to get full use of your app, if it interferes with navigation, if it conveys meaning- then you have created an app which is not accessible! Your end users with low vision and those leveraging assistive devices may not be able to use or understand it. While this post is not dedicated to accessibility topics in Power Apps, I would be remiss if I didn’t mention it when talking about implementing features which are 100% visually accessible only. Not every end user can perceive your user interface.Follow the sage advice of Over Animated PowerPoint Word Art!