Beast Pop
Words punch in one by one; the spoken word glows. The MrBeast classic.
Not screen recordings. The 15 pairings below are drawn each frame, in your browser, by the same deterministic canvas engine the plugin uses to render your Premiere timeline. What you see here is exactly what ships - down to the easing curves.
Words punch in one by one; the spoken word glows. The MrBeast classic.
A rounded highlight box jumps word to word, accent rotating per caption.
The whole line springs in with elastic overshoot. CapCut's signature feel.
The translucent rounded pill behind each line, exactly like the FYP.
The line stays put while the active word fills left to right with color.
Slams in oversized with a camera-shake settle. For the loud moments.
The whole line shakes non-stop until the caption ends.
Glowing tubes flicker on, with rare brown-out dips.
Words materialize from chunky pixels in stepped resolutions.
Chromatic red/cyan split and slice tears that snap clean.
Liquid-metal gradient fill with a shine sweeping across the words.
Letters type in with a blinking caret.
Die-cut sticker look: thick white halo, tilted slap-on placement.
The line stays dim and small; the spoken word zooms up bright.
A hand-style highlighter stroke swipes across the spoken word.
That's 15 of 45 caption presets - every one a mechanically different animation, not a recolor. Set words-per-caption to 1 for the one-word style; 2-4 reads best for the classic MrBeast look. All of them work with all 62 bundled fonts and any color palette.
For monetized and brand-safe edits, SFW mode masks profanity, sexual, violent, weapon and drug words in your captions, bleeps the swears on the timeline, and can gate the original dialogue to silence under each bleep - non-destructively, with 40 ms ramps so there are no clicks. Transcripts are cached uncensored, so toggling SFW and regenerating never re-uploads anything.
2 words masked · 2 bleep windows (back-to-back swears merge)
This runs the plugin's exact word lists locally in your browser. Nothing you type leaves the page. Try class, Sussex, title, document - never touched.
Keyword-title presets don't caption the whole speech. The plugin picks the key moments out of your transcript - names, places, brands, numbers, prices, short punchy statements - and drops a smooth, high-production title on each one, the way Sidemen, LTT and MKBHD-style channels do it. Every title animates out as cleanly as it animates in.
Accent bar grows, text wipes out from behind it - broadcast clean, left-aligned
Letter-spacing eases in over a thin growing rule - minimal tech look
Oversized figure settles into place; anything with a digit takes your accent color
Numbers spin from zero to the real figure, odometer style, with a settle bump
Text rises on a soft translucent card - documentary feel
The phrase types itself into a search bar, caret and all - essay-video classic
A solid accent badge pops in and the text wipes across it - chapter-marker energy
Words rise one after another, then an underline draws across
All 45 caption presets, organised by the styles the clipping community actually uses.
Every face ships inside the plugin (all free-to-redistribute SIL OFL / Apache licensed) and renders correctly even on a machine where none of them are installed. The installer also copies them into your per-user font folder so Editable-text mode can use them in Essential Graphics.
No subscription. No “pro tier”. Everything on this page is in the box, plus every v1.x update.