Words that stack and rise like a title sequence
Each word rises into a growing stack, turning your speech into a cinematic type build. Filler words step aside so the key words own the frame.
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Stacked Rise treats captions as typography, not subtitles. Words rise into place and stack line by line, so a sentence builds on screen the way a title sequence would. Supporting words can tuck beside the stack, leaving the words that matter to carry the composition. It rewards slower, deliberate delivery and gives premium content a premium caption.
When Stacked Rise is the right pick
- Cinematic edits, brand films, and mood pieces.
- Slow, deliberate voiceover with pauses between phrases.
- Creators who want captions that feel designed, not generated.
Getting the most out of it
- It shines on delivery with air in it; rapid-fire speech is better served by Word Pop.
- Mark filler words in the transcript and they tuck to the side instead of joining the stack.
- Keep max line width tight so the stack stays a column, not a wall.
- Try it over footage with negative space; the stack becomes part of the composition.
Questions
Is Stacked Rise free?
Stacked Rise is a Pro style. You can preview it on your own clip for free; exporting needs Pro at $9/mo or $59/yr.
What are the side words?
Words you mark as fillers render smaller beside the stack instead of inside it, so connective words stop diluting the key ones. You control which words count per clip.
What kind of clips suit it best?
Slower, cinematic content. The style builds the frame over a few seconds, so it needs delivery with pauses rather than constant fast speech.
Caption your next clip with Stacked Rise
Everything runs in your browser: transcription, styling, and the MP4 export. Your footage never uploads.