Free feature

Mirror mode For glass rigs and beam-splitters.

Flip text horizontally for glass-mount teleprompter setups. Toggle from the interface, keyboard, or any connected QR remote.

Free plan available · No download required · No credit card

Quick answer

ScrollCue mirror mode flips the script horizontally for glass beam-splitter setups. Toggle from the interface or any connected QR remote. Free feature.

Why mirror mode exists

Glass beam-splitter teleprompter rigs use a half-mirror angled in front of the camera lens. The mirror reflects the prompter display toward the presenter while remaining transparent to the camera. Because the mirror flips the image horizontally, the text on the display must also be flipped so it reads normally in the reflection.

Mirror mode applies a CSS horizontal transform to the entire script. Toggle it on for glass rigs and off for direct-reading setups. The setting is remembered per session.

Do you need mirror mode?

Glass beam-splitter rig

Yes — mirror mode must be on. The reflective glass flips the image, so normal text would appear backwards. Turn mirror mode on and the reflected text reads correctly.

Phone or tablet below a webcam

No — mirror mode should be off. You are reading directly from the screen, not through a reflective surface.

Dual screen to a second monitor

Depends on your setup. If the second monitor feeds a glass rig, turn mirror mode on. If you are reading directly from the monitor, leave it off.

Teleprompter hood or visor

Usually no — most consumer hoods do not use a reflective glass element and display text directly.

Frequently asked questions

Is mirror mode free?

Yes. Mirror mode is free with no account required.

Can I toggle mirror mode from the QR remote?

Yes. The mirror mode toggle is available on the QR remote interface so you can flip it from across the room without touching the display.

Does mirror mode affect recordings?

No. Mirror mode only affects how text appears on the display. Camera recordings capture your face and background — the script is never visible in recordings.