- 6/12/2026
- Updated 6/12/2026
Movie Plots Library Typing Test: Avengers, Spider-Man, Superman, Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, Star Wars, Star Trek, Alien, Predator, Jurassic Park, Sonic, James Bond, Mission: Impossible, and Fast & Furious
Original movie plot typing across 122 films and 14 franchises. Three-minute embed, shareable shelf URLs, franchise guides, and movie achievement badges.
What the Movie Plots Library includes
The Movie Plots Library at /practice/movie-plots ships one hundred twenty-two film shelves across fourteen franchises—each sized for timed typing. Story and characters only—not scripts, subtitles, dialogue transcripts, or production trivia. Every passage uses the same validated speed-test flow as blog embeds: timer starts on first keypress, accuracy and WPM log like standard tests.
Browse those franchises in four categories: Superhero, Fantasy & epic, Sci-fi & adventure, and Action & spy. Filter by name when the list feels long, then open a film shelf when a franchise ships more than one entry.
Movie Plots lives on a separate shelf from the public-domain Story Library at /practice/library and the Game Lore Library at /practice/game-lore. Story typing stays PD literature; game lore covers video-game plot arcs; movie plots cover film summaries for learners who want familiar stories without mixing licensing models in one picker.
Sign in to track film completion with perfect accuracy, unlock movie plot badges on Progress and your public profile, and earn platinum franchise badges when you finish every passage in a saga.
Shareable URL parameters (`collection`, `passage`, `duration`, `franchise`) keep study groups on identical text—bookmark one passage and everyone types the same plot block.
Film counts and release-timeline groupings are in the stats block below. Open a franchise guide when you need embed anchors, rotation tips, and five-minute finale passages for any saga.
Example metric
- Franchises9%
- Films77%
- Passages each5%
- Timers9%
How to pick a franchise and passage
Most learners anchor on one opening passage per franchise, then rotate within that saga after accuracy holds. Superhero starters include The Tesseract Awakens (Avengers), The Spider Bite (Spider-Man), and Krypton's Last Hours (Superman).
Fantasy and epic shelves often start with The Boy Under the Stairs (Harry Potter), The Ring That Was Lost (The Lord of the Rings), or Rebellion in Flight (Star Wars).
Sci-fi and action columns use The Distress Signal (Alien), Into the Jungle (Predator), An Island of Wonders (Jurassic Park), A Station Goes Silent (James Bond), or Highway Hijackers (Fast & Furious).
Franchise guides below document which passage matches each blog embed. James Bond spans twenty-five release-timeline shelves; Spider-Man and Fast & Furious ship longer franchise counts than Sonic or The Lord of the Rings. The in-page widget always types the same plot text you would get from opening the library with matching query parameters—plot summaries only, never scripts or dialogue.
Avengers
4 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Spider-Man
10 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Superman
7 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Harry Potter
8 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
The Lord of the Rings
3 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Star Wars
9 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Star Trek
13 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Alien
7 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Predator
7 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Jurassic Park
7 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Sonic the Hedgehog
3 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
James Bond
25 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Mission: Impossible
8 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
The Fast and the Furious
11 release-timeline film shelfs with eight plot-summary passages each.
Run the three-minute Star Wars embed as your hub anchor
The embedded passage opens Rebellion in Flight—the same text as the Star Wars franchise guide. Label logs star-wars-180-rebellion-in-flight beside every score so you can compare against any other saga—Harry Potter, James Bond, Jurassic Park, or Spider-Man—without mixing formats.
When you want public-domain narrative instead, switch to the Story library hub. When you want video-game plot arcs, open the Game lore hub. All three libraries share timer mechanics; only the passage source and licensing note differ.
Treat the hub embed as calibration, not competition. Run Rebellion in Flight twice on day one at neutral pace, log accuracy before WPM, and only then open a second franchise guide. That sequence prevents the common mistake of opening five sagas in one session and blaming keyboard noise for inconsistent scores.
Day 1–2
Star Wars embed twice; log star-wars-180-rebellion-in-flight with accuracy first.
Day 3–4
Open one franchise guide from a different browse category.
Day 5
Repeat anchor passage; compare median accuracy only.
Day 6–7
Add a five-minute finale URL from that guide when 180s holds.
Pick one movie plot passage slug per week so WPM comparisons stay honest—shuffle mode is fun, not for benchmarks.
Franchise guides for every saga
This hub is the index for the Movie plots typing pillar. The related guides beside this article list every franchise guide—each with its own timed embed, anchor passage, and rotation notes.
Start with Star Wars, Harry Potter, or James Bond when you want a familiar franchise. Branch through Avengers, Jurassic Park, or Mission: Impossible for tone contrast.
Hub articles link to all sibling guides on purpose—learners should not hunt for a missing Bond entry or a Spider-Verse shelf. Franchise guides stay focused on one release timeline; this page orients you across all fourteen browseable franchises before you deep-link into a single embed.
When spy-thriller proper nouns break rhythm, drill shifted capitals before you raise timer duration.
Unlock movie plot badges while you practice
Signed-in learners mark each passage complete on Progress when they finish with perfect accuracy. That unlocks Movie plot starter at your first completion, Plot collector at twenty-five passages, Plot archivist at one hundred, and platinum franchise badges when you clear every passage in a saga.
Badges appear on Progress and your public profile beside Story library, Game lore, quotes, and speed-test achievements. Use franchise guides to plan which saga you want to finish first—James Bond and Spider-Man take longer than Sonic or The Lord of the Rings, but the platinum badge logic is the same.
- Pick a browse category and one anchor passage for the week.
- Run the hub Star Wars embed on Mondays for cross-franchise baseline.
- Open two franchise guides from different columns before Friday.
- Log franchise slug, timer length, and accuracy on every run.
- Review medians on Sunday; change anchor only when accuracy holds.
Pair plot sessions with one standard one-minute test monthly so employer WPM numbers stay comparable.
When spy-thriller proper nouns break rhythm, drill shifted capitals before you raise timer duration.
Continue practicing
You are typing “Rebellion in Flight”—the same plot-summary passage opens in the full Movie Plots library picker.