How it works

Read your script while looking right at the camera.

A traditional teleprompter takes over your whole screen, so it's useless when you're recording in OBS or on a Zoom call. Teleprompter solves that with a floating window that sits on top of any app — you read while your eyes stay on the lens.


1

Paste your script

Drop your talking-head script into the editor. You'll see a live word count and an estimated read time at your chosen speed. Your text is saved to your browser's local storage, so a refresh or accidental tab close won't lose it — and because it's stored only on your device, it's completely private.

2

Dial in the scroll

Set the speed in words per minute (a natural speaking pace is around 130). Pick a font size big enough to read at arm's length, adjust line height and column width, and turn on the 3-2-1 countdown if you want a beat to settle before the text starts moving. Every setting is remembered for next time.

3

Float it on top

Hit Float on top and the scrolling script pops into a small, always-on-top window. Drag and resize it so it sits right under your webcam, over your OBS preview, Zoom call, Loom recorder or CapCut window. It stays on top of everything — even fullscreen apps — so you never lose your place. This uses the browser's Document Picture-in-Picture feature (Chrome and Edge on desktop). On Firefox, Safari and phones you get a one-tap Fullscreen mode instead.

4

Record to the lens

Press Space to play and read. Because the floating window is right next to your camera, your gaze stays on the lens instead of darting off to a second monitor — the difference between "reading at the audience" and actually connecting with them. Nudge the speed with the arrow keys mid-take, press R to jump back to the top, and hit M to mirror the text if you're shooting through a beam-splitter rig.

Ready to record?

Paste a script and float it over your recording app in under a minute.

Open the teleprompter →