Voice-paced auto scroll (speech-follow) scrolls your script at the pace you speak—so you can stay natural, keep eye contact, and stop fighting scroll speed.
If you’ve ever recorded with a teleprompter, you’ve probably had the same problem: the script scrolls too fast, then too slow, then you lose your place and your delivery turns robotic.
Voice-paced auto scroll solves that by matching the scroll speed to how you actually speak.
In this guide, we’ll explain what voice-paced auto scroll is (and what it isn’t), how it works at a high level, and how to set it up so it feels invisible while you record.
Voice-paced auto scroll (also called speech-follow or voice-tracking teleprompter) is a mode where the teleprompter listens to your speech and keeps your place in the script as you read.
Instead of “picking a speed,” you just talk:
This is especially useful for:
You don’t need a studio setup to get great results, but voice-paced auto scroll is sensitive to audio quality and script formatting. Here’s the 80/20.
Voice-paced auto scroll works best when the script looks like how you speak.
The goal isn’t to read perfectly. It’s to sound natural.
Voice-paced auto scroll is essentially trying to answer one question continuously:
“Where are you in the script right now?”
If it gets less confident, you’ll feel drift. The most common causes:
Yes—Supascript is designed to be offline-first. Your scripts are stored locally on your phone (SQLite on-device), so you can write and record without an internet connection.
That offline design is also a privacy win: you’re not depending on a remote database to manage your scripts.
If you want the “teleprompter advantage” without the stiff delivery, voice-paced auto scroll is the best default mode: it adapts to your pace instead of forcing you to adapt to a speed slider.
Start simple: use a clean mic, keep your script conversational, and prioritize a natural read. After a couple takes, you’ll stop thinking about the scroll entirely—and that’s the point.