Your Reel, In Your Order
June 6, 2026
Your profile reel has always played your starred clips first — but until now the order inside that starred set was whatever the camera captured. You could pick your favorites; you couldn't pick which favorite came up next.
That changes today. You can now reorder your starred clips, and your reel plays them in exactly the order you set.
A new curation page
On your own profile, tap the pencil icon in your reel's control bar (right next to the volume button). That opens a new page where you can drag your starred clips into any order — or use the up/down arrows if you prefer keyboard or single-tap moves.
A preview reel pinned at the top plays through your current order as you arrange the list, so you can see how the tape will land before you publish. Tap any clip's thumbnail to preview it in place. Each row also shows the date and time it was recorded — useful when you have two clips from the same game and want to tell them apart.
You can unstar a clip from this page too. A red Cancel / Remove confirm appears before anything sticks, so no accidental removals.
A closing-credits moment between your favorites and the rest
When someone watches your reel, your starred clips still play first. What's new is what happens at the boundary. Instead of cutting straight from your last starred clip into the unstarred ones, the reel pauses on a card that reads MORE FROM <your name>— a small closing-credits moment that signals you've reached the end of the curated set.
The viewer can tap Continue to keep watching or stop right there. On your own profile, that card also carries an Edit reel link, so when you're mid-watch and notice an ordering you'd change, you're one tap away from fixing it.
Quick access from any starred clip
The pencil icon in the video controls only shows up on your own profile, and only while the currently playing clip is one of your starred ones. Once the reel crosses past your favorites, the icon disappears — the prompt to curate only nudges you while you're actually watching the clips you can curate.
Build the tape you actually want to share. As always, let me know what works and what doesn't.
Cheers,
Evan