Overview
Scroller for Your Socials — Pick Up Right Where You Left Off
Stop losing your place in endless timelines.
Scroller for Your Socials remembers the last post you checked on supported sites and automatically brings you back to it the next time you return—so you can keep scrolling without re-finding your spot.
What it does
- Restores your position automatically on supported feeds so you can continue from the last post you were reading.
- Marks a “last read” post and uses it as your personal bookmark in the timeline.
- Keyboard-friendly navigation so you can move through posts quickly without constantly grabbing the mouse.
Supported sites
- Letterboxd (Activity feed)
- X / Twitter (Movies tab)
- Bluesky (Feed)
How it works (simple):
- Browse your feed like normal.
- When you want to mark where you left off, press L (or click the small progress checkbox that appears near a post).
- Next time you visit that feed, the extension scrolls until it finds your saved post and centers it on screen.
Controls & shortcuts
-> J — jump to the next post
-> K — jump to the previous post
-> L — set / clear your “last read” marker for the currently selected post
- A subtle highlight shows which post is currently selected, and a small checkbox lets you mark progress with a click.
Why it’s useful
- No more “Where was I?” after refreshing, closing a tab, or returning later.
- Great for fast-scrolling feeds where you don’t want to rely on the platform’s inconsistent “seen” state.
- Built for speed and minimal UI—it stays out of the way until you need it.
Privacy
- No accounts, no tracking, no analytics.
- Your progress is saved locally in your browser (using local storage) and never leaves your device.
Notes
- Designed specifically for the supported pages/feeds listed above.
- If a site loads posts dynamically, the extension may briefly scroll while it loads more items in order to locate your saved post.
- If you want, paste the exact rejection text from the Chrome Web Store review and I’ll tailor this description to match their checklist (permissions wording, single-purpose clarity, and “doesn’t imply unsupported behavior” language).
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