← GalleryBounce Rise Text Animation for PowerPoint & Slides
Bounce Rise lifts each character up from below and settles it into place with a springy overshoot, left to right. Best for a title that wants energy and a little playfulness without going full cartoon — a confident, physical entrance.
The elastic settle gives it real weight and bounce, unlike a flat slide-in — it reads as energetic and a little fun, well suited to upbeat or celebratory content. Works on any background since it's pure motion, no color trick involved. Keep titles reasonably short — the left-to-right stagger means a long title takes noticeably longer to finish settling.
Best for
- Celebration & Events: An event name bouncing into place sets an upbeat, celebratory tone right at the open.
- Welcome & Openers: A welcome title with a springy entrance feels warm and energetic rather than static.
How to add it to your slides
- Type your text above and adjust color/size until it looks right.
- Click Export and choose GIF or MP4 at your resolution.
- In PowerPoint, Insert → Pictures (GIF) or Videos (MP4), then set it to play automatically and loop.
Full PowerPoint/Slides/Keynote guide →FAQ
- What occasions does Bounce Rise suit?
- Bounce Rise works best for celebration & events and welcome & openers.
- Will it work in PowerPoint, Google Slides, or Keynote?
- Yes. Export as GIF and MP4 and insert it as a picture (GIF) or video (MP4) — all three apps support animated GIFs and MP4 video natively. Set it to play automatically and loop from the insert menu so it animates during your slideshow.
- Can I put this over my own slide background?
- Yes — this effect supports a transparent background. Export as a transparent GIF (MP4 has no alpha channel, so transparency is GIF-only) and it composites cleanly over your own slide design.
- What happens if I export my deck to PDF?
- PowerPoint's PDF export freezes a GIF or video on its first frame. Since this effect reveals its text over time, that first frame would normally be blank or partial — so the export automatically holds on the fully-revealed instant for a moment before the animation plays, meaning the PDF version always shows complete text.
- Why does a longer title take longer to fully settle?
- Each character starts its bounce 30ms after the previous one, left to right, matching the source animation's own timing — so a longer title's last character starts noticeably later. Keep titles short for the snappiest result.
Adapted from kotAndy. Full credits at /credits.