Discordo is a lightweight, secure, and feature-rich Discord terminal client. Heavily work-in-progress, expect breaking changes.
- Lightweight
- Secure
- Configurable
- Cross-platform
- Minimalistic
- Feature-rich
- Mouse & clipboard support
- 2-Factor authentication
- Desktop notifications
- Partial Discord-flavored markdown
You can download and install a prebuilt binary here for Windows, macOS, or Linux.
- Arch Linux:
yay -S discordo-git
(thanks to Alyxia Sother for maintaining the AUR package).
git clone https://github.com/ayntgl/discordo
cd discordo
make build
# optional
sudo mv ./discordo /usr/local/bin
xclip
orxsel
for X11.- Ubuntu:
apt install xclip
- Arch Linux:
pacman -S xclip
- Fedora:
dnf install xclip
- Ubuntu:
wl-clipboard
for Wayland.- Ubuntu:
apt install wl-clipboard
- Arch Linux:
pacman -S wl-clipboard
- Fedora:
dnf install wl-clipboard
- Ubuntu:
-
Run the
discordo
executable with no arguments. -
Log in using the account email and password (first-time login) and click on the "Login" button to continue.
-
If you are using a bot account to login, set the
token
command-line flag to the token of the bot and prefix it withBot
(eg:-token "Bot OTI2MDU5NTQxNDE2Nzc5ODA2.Yc2KKA.2iZ-5JxgxG-9Ub8GHzBSn-NJjNg"
). -
By default, Discordo utilizes OS-specific keyring to store the authentication token. However, if you prefer not to use a keyring (not recommended), you may set the
token
command-line flag to the authentication token and Discordo will prioritize the usage of the provided token to login instead of keyring.
-
A default configuration file is created on first start-up at $HOME/.config/discordo/config.toml
on Unix, $HOME/Library/Application Support/discordo/config.toml
on Darwin, and %AppData%/discordo/config.toml
on Windows. You can configure the default configuration path using the config
command-line flag.
Automated user accounts or "self-bots" are against Discord's Terms of Service. I am not responsible for any loss caused by using "self-bots" or Discordo.