Transform static lists into a cinematic experience. A premium directory and portfolio block with floating images powered by advanced LERP physics.

Brand Identity Strategy & Logo
Web Experience FSE Development
  • DOM Portaling Engine

Revealed images detach from their parent container and are injected directly into the . Say goodbye to overflow: hidden issues in WordPress themes.

  • LERP & Tilt Physics

Velocity vectors calculate cursor latency, generating an organic Parallax and Tilt effect of the floating image during movement.

  • Native Touch Interaction

Avoid hover errors on mobile. Choose a “Dual-Tap” behavior (tap for image, tap for link) or turn the list into a smart static feed.

The core functionality is 100% free. Upgrade to PRO for cinematic visuals.

  • Maximum 3 items in list
  • Text Style “Solid” & Magnetic Effect
  • Standard Mask (Fade / Wipe)
  • Image Filter (Grayscale on Hover)
  • Unlimited Lists
  • Text Effects (Outline, Blur, Lift)
  • Media Frames (Glass, Vignette, Polaroid)
  • Physics Settings (LERP, Tilt Velocity)
  • Add unlimited elements in the manage
  • Absolute physics control (LERP Speed, Offset)
  • Text Animations (Outline, Blur Reveal, Lift & Float)
  • Focus Dimming Opacity on List
  • Media Frames (Glassmorphism, Polaroid, etc)
  • Optical Blend Modes (Difference, Exclusion)
  • Noise Grain Overlay

The technology architecture behind Cursor Reveal.

Won’t the images be cut off by my section container?

No. Cursor Reveal utilizes a DOM Portaling engine. The flying media box detaches itself from the Gutenberg structure and anchors directly to the site’s <body> tag, hovering above all other elements with an absolute Z-Index.

Does it have a negative impact on LCP or PageSpeed?

Zero. The images are initially visually hidden, but are indexable, and the 60FPS physics script runs exclusively under an AbortController that is instantly deactivated (Garbage Collection) if the user leaves the page or triggers an Infinite Scroll.

Is it safe against XSS vulnerabilities?

Yes. Unlike generic scripts, our media injection strictly uses the native document.createElement() API instead of the dangerous innerHTML function, completely eliminating the possibility of malicious code injection, being fully compliant with WordPress VIP standards.