Movement Library
Movements with structure.
Ultimate Lift is built on curated training data, not a flat exercise list. The Library already contains 900+ movement definitions and 3,500+ variation paths, making it one of the most authoritative sources of anatomical movement, muscle, and joint data available online.
In the app
The Library is visible in the app, not hidden in a spreadsheet.
Movement entries expose practical reference data for lifters and coaches: overview, how-to guidance, coaching cues, muscles, joints, variations, history, 1RM context, and metrics. Separate muscle and joint databases make the anatomical layer searchable.
Data depth
Not exercise names. Movement objects.
Each movement can carry taxonomy, programming rules, anatomy, joint load, execution guidance, constraints, and substitution logic. The sample pages expose a small slice of the same structure used to power coaching, logging, and programme decisions.
Conventional Deadlift
50Barbell Flat Bench Press
44Movement identity
- Pattern, type, category, family, super-family
- Plane, laterality, body position, weight bearing
- Technical demand, balance demand, impact, popularity
- Grip, spotting, equipment tier, setup requirements
Programming context
- Intensity models: %1RM, RPE, RIR, absolute kg
- Recommended tempo, time-based flags, variation tags
- Control credit, control signals, movement tags
- Recovery cost and programme coverage hints
Muscle mapping
- Primary and secondary muscle group tiers
- Individual muscle engagement by region
- Stabiliser and support roles where relevant
- Training-relevant grouping for programme balance
Risk and mechanism
- Joint group severity by movement
- Individual joint mechanisms
- Load mechanisms such as shear, compression, extension
- Constraint data for pain, injury, and equipment changes
Coaching content
- Setup text and phase-by-phase execution model
- Breathing pattern and recommended tempo
- Coaching cues and common mistakes
- Modifications, regressions, and progressions
Substitution graph
- Alternatives, regressions, progressions, and variations
- Reason tags explaining why a swap is useful
- Full movement names rather than raw slugs
- Name variants and aliases for discoverability
Sample movements
Reference entries from the current Library.
These examples show how a familiar lift becomes a structured movement object with anatomy, programming, execution, and substitution data.
Back Squat (Low Bar)
The low-bar back squat positions the barbell across the rear deltoids and mid-trapezius, creating a more forward-leaning torso angle than the high-bar variant. This shifts emphasis toward the posterior chain — glutes and hamstrings — and typically allows 5-10% more weight than high-bar due to the shorter moment arm at the hip.
- Intensity
- %1RM, RPE, RIR, Absolute kg
Conventional Deadlift
The conventional deadlift pulls a loaded barbell from the floor to hip height using a hip-width stance and shoulder-width grip, demanding powerful hip and knee extension with a rigid trunk. It is the root of the deadlift family and the heaviest posterior chain movement most lifters will perform.
- Intensity
- %1RM, RPE, RIR, Absolute kg
Barbell Flat Bench Press
The flat barbell bench press is the foundational horizontal pressing movement, driving chest, anterior deltoid, and triceps development through a full range of motion while lying supine on a flat bench. It is the root of the bench press family and the standard upper-body pressing test.
- Intensity
- %1RM, RPE, RIR, Absolute kg