I just discovered EaseMaster and honestly, it's brilliant.
For my YouTube videos, I've been working with the same set of easing functions—the usual suspects that I know work. But this tool? It's like walking into a shop and realizing there are way more options than you thought existed.
The interface is clean. You've got springs, beziers, power curves, Material Design easings. You can preview how each one feels on different properties—position, scale, opacity, rotation. You can fiddle with the duration, add delay, loop it. And crucially, you can export the code in whatever format you need.
What really clicked for me is that easing shapes how an animation feels. Not just its timing, but the vibe of it. A stiff, snappy curve feels mechanical. A wobbly spring feels playful. A slow ease-in-out feels deliberate. So when I'm building a moment in a video and I'm trying to nail a specific feeling, instead of reaching for my usual three or four, I can now experiment. Try something bouncy. Try something gentle. Find the right curve that matches what I'm going for.
It's going to be genuinely useful. Less "I know exactly which easing to use," more "let me play around until it feels right."