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This has worked in some discord servers and they have been successful. Having bad admins and mods is one of the biggest reasons why discords fail. 6: Channels: Another thing that should be managed well is channels. The biggest pet peeve of mine is a server having too many damn channels.
Probably the most important thing for a discord server. If improperly configured, it could be dangerous for your server. Give the @ everyone role no permissions, and a general member role with basic. If you have roles that server members can pick, make a role separator that will be assigned to everyone.
Many successful content creators don't have Discord and do just fine, or keep it as a Patreon perk. Also consider the value of your time -- is the 5 to 10 hours you'll probably take to set up a Discord server, write rules, install bots, remember to promote it, etc worth your time?
dont create too many channels and don't make the rules strict. 1. Good channel. Add some icons in your server's channel, maybe add a star infant of the channel. Keep things interesting but yet minimal. 2. Good moderation/staffings. Dyno or Sapphire would be an excellent choice for moderation bots.
Cross promotion for your own games as you alluded to. The main thing you need to do when starting out is keep it simple. You don't need to overload with folders and channels - a single channel per game is fine early on. You can also have 1 announcement channel for ALL your games so it's just a single thread.
2 ways; with a bot, or without a bot. Ultimately it depends on how you want to setup your server but you'll need to make use of your roles; or well a role in this case. You can either have a bot auto-assign a role eg. "Unverified" to the users who join your server and have Read Messages on all channels be denied for this role.
1. 2 Share. Sort by: walaooooeh. •. Disable the Create Instant Invite from @everyone role in Server Settings and in the per channel setting. When you make an invite, set the max number of uses to 1 or 2 depending on who you're inviting. Reply.
I've been the server owner of a discord server that was originally for a dozen or so friends of mine. The server has now grown to be about 50+ people in total. I love being an admin, managing roles, adding channels etc. I really enjoy monitoring the server and helping people get all setup and working ideally.
They can't join the server through the emoji/sticker - they can't even see what server it's from unless they're in it already, if they're not in it then it'll just say private server and nothing else. Only emoji/stickers from public servers (those on server discovery) will show the server information and allow you to join through them. 4. Award.
Give them a reason to check your server and engage in it. Whether that’s other members, interesting channels, events, bots, etc. The people that joined likely have no emotional attachment to your server. Give them a reason to be emotionally attached. You want them to want to be there. You want them to feel like it’s their community.