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Communication

Put an AI agent to work inside Discord

Connect Discord in one click and delegate the busywork: an autonomous agent that watches channels and forum posts, answers recurring questions, welcomes new members, posts digests, and flags what needs a human. You set the autonomy, it does the work.

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In short

Fleece AI connects to Discord through managed OAuth and lets autonomous agents read and post messages, watch channels and forum posts, reply in threads, welcome new members, and react to events in real time. Agents combine Discord with 3,000+ other apps — Slack, Notion, GitHub, Gmail — so a post in your server can become an answer, a ticket, a tracker entry, or an alert, under the approval rules you set.

At a glance

CategoryCommunication
AvailabilityStarter plan and up — included in the 7-day trial
Connects to3,000+ apps via managed OAuth
SetupConnect your tools — no code required
AutonomySuggest-only to fully autonomous, with approval gates
Pricing7-day trial (€1 card check, credited back), then paid plans

By Loïc Jané · Updated June 18, 2026

What a Fleece agent does with Discord

Discord is where your community actually lives — support questions pile up in a help forum channel, newcomers arrive in #welcome, power users debate in threads, and moderators watch for the message that crosses a line. A Fleece agent sits inside that server. It reads the channels and forum posts you point it at, follows threads in context, understands who holds which role, and acts: it answers, welcomes, tags, escalates, or stays quiet, following the instructions you give it in plain language.

Under the hood the connection runs through managed OAuth — you authorize Discord once, and Fleece stores, scopes, and refreshes tokens securely. The agent can post to channels and threads, open and reply inside forum posts, add reactions, read channel history, look up members and their roles, and drive server webhooks. Real-time event triggers let it react the moment a message lands in a watched channel, a forum thread is opened, a member joins, or a reaction is added — no polling, no lag.

What separates this from a classic Discord bot or a slash-command handler is judgment. A bot matches a command to a fixed response; an agent reads the actual post, decides whether it needs an answer, drafts one that fits the thread, and coordinates other tools to close the loop. And because Fleece agents run as a hierarchy — a lead agent delegating to specialized child agents — one Discord-facing agent can hand a research question to a research agent or a bug to an engineering agent and report the result back in the thread.

What the agent can do in Discord

Forum triage

Watches your help forum channel, reads each new post, answers what it can from your docs, and routes the rest to the right role or channel.

Member onboarding

Greets new arrivals, walks them through the rules and key channels, assigns a starter role, and follows up if they go quiet.

Answers in threads

Replies to recurring questions inside threads and forum posts with context-aware answers drawn from your connected docs and past conversations.

Digests and alerts

Posts scheduled community digests — top threads, unanswered questions, sentiment shifts — and real-time alerts pulled from your other tools.

Moderation with gates

Flags posts that break your rules and proposes an action — warn, mute, remove — that waits for your one-click approval before anything happens.

Real-time triggers

Reacts the instant a message, forum post, join, or reaction happens in a watched channel, through event-based triggers rather than polling.

Integrations

Automations teams run on Discord

These are concrete setups you can describe to a Fleece agent in plain language. Each one combines Discord with other connected apps.

1

Support: keep the help forum answered

The agent watches your #help forum channel, answers known questions in-thread from your documentation, and files genuine bugs as GitHub issues with the forum post linked. Posts that name an outage or an angry paying customer are escalated to your team's Slack within seconds. Every post it can't resolve gets tagged, so a human knows exactly what is still open.

2

Onboarding: turn arrivals into members

When a member joins the server, the agent welcomes them in #welcome, assigns a starter role, and shares the three channels most newcomers need. If they haven't posted after a couple of days it sends a gentle nudge, and it logs each new member in a Notion onboarding tracker so the community team can see who is still finding their feet.

3

Insight: a weekly read on the community

Every Monday the agent scans the past week across your busiest channels and forum posts, then writes a digest — top threads, questions that went unanswered, recurring feature requests, shifts in tone — and posts it to your team's Slack channel while filing a copy in Notion. The team starts the week knowing what the community actually cared about, without anyone scrolling back through the server.

4

Moderation: judgment before action

The agent watches for posts that cross your rules — spam links, harassment, scam invites — and instead of acting blindly it proposes the action in a private moderator channel: warn, mute, or remove, with the offending message quoted. A moderator approves in one click, the agent carries it out and records it, and repeat offenders are summarized in a weekly Notion report.

How to connect Discord to Fleece AI

1

Create your Fleece account

Sign up and start the 7-day trial. You land in a workspace where agents, flows, and integrations live together.

2

Connect Discord via managed OAuth

Pick Discord from the integrations catalog and authorize it in one click. Fleece manages tokens and scopes for you; you can revoke access at any time from Discord or from Fleece.

3

Describe the job in plain language

Create an agent and tell it what to watch and what to do — "watch the #help forum, answer known questions from our docs, escalate outages to our Slack". No flowchart building required.

4

Set autonomy and approval gates

Choose what the agent may do on its own and what waits for your sign-off. Sensitive actions — moderation, external announcements — pause for one-click approval.

5

Run it on triggers or a schedule

Let the agent react to Discord events in real time, or schedule recurring flows — welcome nudges, Monday digests — that run without you.

Discord

Discord works better with the rest of your stack

Discord automations get powerful when they cross app boundaries. Pair Discord with Slack to route community signals to your team, with Notion to keep an onboarding tracker or community digest, with GitHub to turn forum bug reports into tracked issues, or with Gmail to follow up with members by email — all through the same agent, all under the same approval rules. Fleece connects to 3,000+ apps, so the tools you already run alongside your community are almost certainly covered.

Explore all 3,000+ integrations

Frequently asked questions

Put Discord on autopilot

Connect Discord in one click, describe the job in plain language, and let an autonomous agent handle your community. 7-day trial, cancel anytime.

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